This week kicked off the public phase of the impeachment inquiry. On Wednesday, we heard the testimonies of State Department officials Bill Taylor and George Kent and on Friday the testimony of former US Ambassador to Ukraine Marie Yovanovitch. Vox’s Andrew Prokop helps us break them down.
Then, Brianne Gorod, the chief counsel for the Constitutional Accountability Center, helps us understand the term “obstruction of justice.” What does it mean? When does it apply? And has the president committed it?
Plus: How Republicans are normalizing obstruction of justice in all of its forms -- and the precedent that sets for the future.
References:
Andrew Prokop's 4 takeaways from the first public impeachment hearing
Want to contact the show? Reach out at ezrakleinshow@vox.com
Credits:
Guest host - Sean Illing
Producer, engineer, and editor - Jeff Geld
Researcher - Roge Karma
Theme music composed by Jon Natchez
Special thanks to Liz Nelson
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Capitol punishment
A step past impeachment
Weeds 2020: The Bernie electability debate
Jill Lepore on what I get wrong
The impeachment trial convicted American politics
The McConnell effect
"Constitutional decay" in the US Senate
Impeachment and Iran
Impeachment in, and beyond, the Beltway
Mr. Feldman goes to Washington
How Andrew Johnson’s impeachment created the template for Trump’s
Was Rudy Giuliani always like this?
What’s wrong with the Republican Party?
The biggest difference between Trump and Nixon is Fox News
A no-BS guide to how the House impeachment process really works
The Ukraine story is a Russia story
The four words that will decide impeachment
We are living through history
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