https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/polit...mgO?li=BBnb7Kz
The House Judiciary Committee's minority blasted the committee's rush  to impeach President Trump and wrote that history will not look kindly  on how exculpatory evidence was ignored to meet a "self-imposed December  deadline," according to the full articles of 
impeachment report released early Monday.
The  minority, which is comprised of Republicans, blasted the Democrat-led  majority for not making the case for impeachment and simply employing  "holdover" arguments from other investigations to make their case.  Despite the divide, Rep. Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y., the chairman of the  committee, wrote for the majority that Trump is a threat to the  Constitution and should be removed from office.
   
 The committee released a 658-page report on the impeachment  resolution that lays out the case against Trump. Democrats have raised  two articles of impeachable offenses, including abuse of power by  soliciting Ukraine to interfere in the 2020 election and then  obstructing  Congress during its investigation.
The  minority wrote that both articles are supported by assumptions and  hearsay. The minority, headed by Rep. Doug Collins, R-Ga., the ranking  member of the committee, wrote that the majority decided to “pursue  impeachment first and build a case second.”
The majority ignored exculpatory evidence but proclaimed the "facts are uncontested,” the minority wrote.
"The  facts are contested, and, in many areas, the majority's claims are  directly contradicted by the evidence," the minority wrote.   They continued that "not one of the criminal accusations leveled at the  president over the past year—including bribery, extortion,  collusion/conspiracy with foreign enemies, or obstruction of justice—has  found a place in the articles. Some of these arguments are just  holdovers from an earlier disingenuous attempt by the majority to  weaponized the Russia collusion investigation for political gain."
The  majority's actions were "unprecedented, unjustifiable, and will only  dilute the significance of the dire recourse that is  impeachment," they wrote.
The minority also claimed procedural  missteps by the majority by not allowing a "minority day of hearings,"  despite several requests to Nadler. They called the denial “blatant” and  “intentional.” They claim Nadler also refused a request to subpoena  witnesses.  They wrote that there was a complete absence of “fact  witnesses” and the case rested with the testimony from four academics  and another with a panel of Congressional staffers.
The majority  claimed that they were transparent. The majority wrote that the minority  wanted to hear testimony from the whistleblower, but the  majority stressed the importance of protecting the person’s identity.  The minority's request to hear from Hunter Biden—the son of  Joe  Biden—was "well outside the scope of the inquiry," the majority wrote.
At  the heart of the first charge, is Trump’s July 25 phone call with  Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky. Democrats have relied on a  whistleblower’s complaint that claimed that there was at least an  implied quid pro quo during the phone conversation. Trump was also  accused of using agents "within and outside" the U.S. government to  compel Kiev to investigate the Bidens and their business dealings in the  country. The claim is that Trump withheld $391 million in essential  military funds to pressure Kiev on the investigations.
© FoxNews.com  House Intelligence Chair Adam Schiff joins Chris Wallace on 'Fox News Sunday.' Both Trump and Zelensky deny there was ever any implied or explicit quid pro quo.
The newly released report also claims that Trump directed key players in the inquiry from participating. 
Trump  "interposed the powers of the Presidency against the lawful subpoenas  of the House of Representatives, and assumed to himself functions and  judgments necessary to the exercise of the ‘‘sole Power of Impeachment’’  vested by the Constitution in the House of Representatives,” the report  said.
The report listed John “Mick” Mulvaney, Trump’s acting  chief of staff, and Robert B. Blair, a senior adviser to Mulvaney, as  officials who have denied subpoenas. 
Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., on Sunday
 proposed in a letter  to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., that Mulvaney be  subpoenaed to testify in an impeachment trial. McConnell told Fox News  last week that the chances of Trump being removed from office are zero.
Republicans  say Democrats are impeaching the president because they can’t beat him  in 2020. Democrats warn Americans can’t wait for the next election  because they worry what Trump will try next.
The House is expected  to vote on the articles next week, in the days before Christmas. That  would send the impeachment effort to the Senate for a 2020 trial.
The  majority claimed that the impeachment inquiry was performed in a fair  manner and pointed out that the purpose of the inquiry was to determine  if Trump “may have committed an impeachable offense.” Trump was offered  the opportunity to participate, but he declined, the majority wrote. The  president has refused to participate in the proceedings.
At about  the time the impeachment report was being released, Trump was on  Twitter touting his record and slamming the allegations. He wrote that  despite the impeachment and "obstruction," he had one of the most  successful presidencies in history.
Typical DPST hypocrisy!