The Daily - ‘We Followed the President’s Orders’
Episode Date: November 21, 2019Gordon D. Sondland, the United States ambassador to the European Union, has evolved from a loyal Trump campaign donor to a witness central to the impeachment inquiry. But his testimony has been contra...dicted on multiple occasions.Today, we look at how both Democrats and Republicans on the House Intelligence Committee handled their most complicated witness to date. Guest: Nicholas Fandos, who covers Congress for The New York Times. For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Background reading:Mr. Sondland implicated Secretary of State Mike Pompeo in the nation’s biggest foreign policy controversy in nearly two decades. Reciting emails that he had written to Mr. Pompeo, he said that “everyone was in the loop.”Confused about what this moment might mean? Here are answers to seven key questions about the impeachment process.
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From The New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro. This is The Daily.
Gordon Sondland is a Trump donor-turned-EU ambassador-turned-witness in the impeachment
inquiry, whose testimony has been contradicted on multiple occasions. Today, how both Democrats and Republicans
on the House Intelligence Committee
chose to handle their most complicated witness to date.
It's Thursday, November 21st.
So Nick, give us a sense of what it felt like
to be in that room this morning
as the committee prepared to hear from Gordon Sondland, this very complicated witness.
So we knew that in the middle of this jam-packed week of impeachment testimony,
Gordon Sondland's appearance was going to be something different.
Nick Fandos was in the Capitol for Sondland's testimony.
Sondland has really been described by almost everybody as having been in the capital for Sondland's testimony. Sondland has really been described by almost everybody
as having been in the middle of this pressure campaign on Ukraine this summer.
Now, there was particular anticipation because Sondland's story,
unlike some other witnesses, has evolved as time has gone on.
So when he first came in and spoke in private with investigators in October, he was
pretty unclear about whether or not the president was trying to leverage a White House meeting or
security aid for Ukraine to get the investigations that he wanted. He told them repeatedly, I can't
remember this, I can't remember that. Well, after that happened, Sondland submitted a supplement to
his testimony in writing that
updated that and said, actually, I do think there was a quid pro quo.
And so there was a lot of anticipation heading into his testimony as to which Gordon Sondland
would show up.
What story was he going to tell?
Is he going to cop to all these different things?
How is he going to treat the president?
How is he going to treat his own evolving story?
And it really felt like it could go either way.
So what happens? How does this much-anticipated hearing begin?
So a little after 9 o'clock, Gordon Sondland walks into the same grand hearing room where all the impeachment hearings had been taking place.
Chairman Schiff dropped his gavel.
And then after taking an oath to tell the truth and nothing but the truth,
Sondland sits down and begins reading from a pretty thick stack of papers,
an opening statement that he's brought with him.
And he starts by saying that,
I have not had access to all of my phone records,
State Department emails,
and many, many other State Department documents.
His job is made more difficult by the fact
that he has not been allowed to go back to the State Department
and look at notes or records
that might be able to fill in his recollections.
Having access would have been very helpful to me
in trying to reconstruct with whom I spoke and met and when and what was said.
Seems to be a nod at the fact that his story is, in the most generous sense, evolving.
And he begins to tell the story about his involvement with Ukraine policy over the last, say, five or six months.
The U.S. delegation developed a very positive view of the Ukraine government.
He begins talking about a meeting with President Trump in May in the Oval Office after he attended the inauguration of Ukraine's new president.
Unfortunately, President Trump was skeptical.
In response to our persistent efforts in that meeting to change his views, President Trump directed us to, quote,
talk with Rudy. We weren't happy with the president's directive to talk with Rudy.
We did not want to involve Mr. Giuliani. What he then starts to unspool is a set of facts and
meetings that we've now heard a lot about in the last couple of months. Simply put, we were playing the hand we were dealt.
We all understood that if we refused to work with Mr. Giuliani,
we would lose a very important opportunity
to cement relations between the United States and Ukraine.
So we followed the president's orders.
How, you know, May became June, became July, and then August. And it became clear to him over time that President Trump, through his lawyer,
Mr. Giuliani, and through actions that he took, wanted to extract from the Ukrainians
certain politically beneficial investigations. And at one point, pretty early in his statement,
he addresses the Latin phrase that has been confusing everyone as this has gone along.
Was there a quid pro quo?
Was it a quid pro quo, this for that, or was it not?
And he says,
With regard to the requested White House call and the White House meeting,
the answer is yes.
Unequivocally, that as far as I'm concerned, there was a quid pro quo around the White House meeting, the answer is yes. Unequivocally, that as far as I'm concerned,
there was a quid pro quo around the White House meeting.
Right, and I was struck by how casually he says that.
This thing that is very much at the center of the entire inquiry.
And the thing that has been contested by other witnesses,
he states, you know, very authoritatively, without reservation.
Now, he's a little bit more cautious about whether or not there was a quid pro quo
around the suspended military assistance.
In July and August of 2019, we learned that the White House had also suspended security aid to Ukraine.
I tried diligently to ask why the aid was suspended, but I never received a clear answer. Still haven't to
this day. So he came to conclude by August that that too was dependent on Ukraine announcing
these investigations that the president wanted. Committing to the investigations of the 2016
elections and Burisma as Mr. Giuliani had demanded. Now, Sondland has another clear objective as he's laying out his story,
and that is to defend himself against the testimony from other witnesses
who have tried to describe him as either a rogue actor
or somebody that was working through an improper diplomatic channel.
I'm not sure how someone could characterize something as an irregular channel
when you're talking to the President of the United States,
the Secretary of State, the National Security Advisor,
the Chief of Staff of the White House, the Secretary of Energy.
I don't know how that's irregular if a bunch of...
He says, no, this was the real channel.
I was working with the President of the United States.
I was working with top American diplomats and officials.
And not only was it proper, but all of those people States. I was working with top American diplomats and officials. And not only was it proper,
but all of those people knew what I was up to
and what we were trying to accomplish as this went along.
Within my State Department emails,
there is a July 19th email.
This email was sent,
this email was sent
to Secretary Pompeo,
Secretary Perry,
Brian McCormick, who was Secretary Perry's chief of staff at the time.
Basically, you know, if for weeks we've had witness after witness,
and certainly the White House and the Republicans
willing to throw Gordon Sondland under the bus
to try and push all of this onto him as a kind of lone wolf.
I mean, he was taking everybody under the bus with him.
Chief of Staff Mulvaney and Mr. Mulvaney's senior advisor, Rob Blair.
A lot of senior officials.
These emails show that the leadership of the State Department,
the National Security Council, and the White House
were all informed about the Ukraine efforts.
Right. He's saying, everybody who now wants to distance themselves from me,
they were actually all in the loop.
That's right. It's a phrase he uses several times.
It was no secret. Everyone's in the loop.
Everyone was in the loop.
In the loop.
Again.
In the loop.
Everyone was in the loop. Everyone was in the loop. In the loop. Again, everyone was in the loop.
They were in the loop.
There was a September 1st meeting with President Zelensky in Warsaw.
During the actual meeting, President Zelensky raised the issue of security assistance directly with Vice President Pence.
And the vice president said that he would speak to President Trump about it.
And Nick, what's the significance of what he's saying here?
I mean, in theory, this is very explosive.
The vice president, the secretary of state, are being, in Sondland's testimony, directly drawn into this.
Right. He's trying to make the point that this wasn't just me.
Like, everyone understood this to be Trump's objective out of this relationship.
And we were all working toward that. And nobody found it unusual that I was doing what I was doing.
I sent Secretary Pompeo an email to express my appreciation for his joining a series of meetings in Brussels following the Warsaw trip.
I wrote, Mike, thanks for schlepping to Europe. I think it was really
important and the chemistry seems promising. Really appreciate it. Secretary Pompeo replied
the next day on Wednesday, September 4th, quote, all good. You're doing great work. Keep banging away.
And with that, Sondland completes his opening statement.
It remains an honor to serve the people of the United States as their United States ambassador to the European Union.
I look forward to answering the committee's questions.
Thank you.
And it's the Democrats' turn for 45 minutes to begin asking questions.
We will now proceed to the first round of questions.
First Chairman Schiff has a few of his own, but mostly he passes the mic over to Dan Goldman,
who is his chief investigator who's been playing a role in these hearings, questioning witnesses directly.
Mr. Goldman.
Thank you, Mr. Chairman. In your opening statement, Ambassador Sondland, you detailed the benefits that you have gained from obtaining some additional documents over the past few weeks. Is that right?
In terms of refreshing my recollection, that's right.
Because he doesn't shy away from what becomes clear over the course of the day is a pretty shoddy memory on the part of Sondland.
You have remembered a lot more than you did when you were deposed. Is that right?
That's correct.
And one of the things that—
And in doing that, Goldman does something interesting, which is that—
Ambassador Taylor also testified under oath that you said that President Trump wanted Zelensky in a public box.
Do you recall using that expression?
Yeah, it goes back to—
He repeatedly leans on those witnesses with better memories or people who took contemporaneous notes.
Do you have any reason to question Ambassador Taylor's testimony based on his meticulous and careful contemporaneous notes?
Taylor's testimony based on his meticulous and careful contemporaneous notes? I'm not going to question or not question. I'm just telling you what I believe I was referring to. To describe
things that Sondland told them or that describe things that Sondland did and basically ask Sondland
to confirm that these things happened. Let me fast forward a week and show you another text
exchange which may help refresh your recollection. On September 8th, you sent a text to Ambassador Taylor and Ambassador Volker. Can you
read what you wrote there? To basically bring Sondland up into line with testimony they've
gotten from other people about him. So you do acknowledge you spoke to President Trump as you
indicated in that text, right? If I said I did, I did.
And that's important as they move towards writing a report and presenting a kind of full case about what happened to the American people.
It helps eliminate some of the discrepancies in the testimony they've gotten.
Which of these exchanges stood out to you?
Well, one in particular is fresh in my mind because we just learned about it for
the first time last week. And one of the things that you now remember is the discussion that you
had with President Trump on July 26th in that restaurant in Kiev, right? Now, remember, that's
the day after Trump himself spoke to Zelensky and told him that I want these investigations into the Bidens in 2016.
Other witnesses have described Sondland basically speaking on the phone with the president,
who was speaking so loud that he had to hold the phone away from his ear.
He claims to have overheard part of the conversation, and I'm not going to dispute what he did or didn't hear.
Others could overhear President Trump asking about, quote-unquote, the investigations,
and Sondland assured him, you know, don't worry, with some expletives laid in,
President Zelensky will do whatever you want.
Right, because Ukraine loves your tush.
Something like that.
Well, he also testified that President Zelensky, quote, loves your ass, unquote.
Do you recall saying that?
Yeah, it sounds like something I would say.
And what he basically does over the course of this back and forth is says...
Putting it in Trump speak by saying he loves your ass, he'll do whatever you want,
meant that he would really work with us on a whole host of issues.
You've heard the president talk.
That's how President Trump and I communicate, a lot of four-letter words.
In this case, three-letter.
He also contests a couple of small points.
I don't think I would have said that.
But in the end, he confirms the essence of the story as it's been related by other witnesses
and for the first time kind of established that that happened.
Again, trying to reconstruct a very busy day without the benefit.
But if someone said I had a meeting and I went to the meeting, then I'm not going to dispute that.
So it's kind of that familiar mix of Sondland's self-protection, lack of recall, but overall damning testimony.
I think that's right.
Mr. Chairman, I yield back.
So the Democrats wrap up their questioning.
That concludes our 45 minutes. of hours of testimony in private and in public, they've finally gotten from a lead witness who
had direct access to the president, a statement, an admission of one of the things that they've
been looking for and trying to prove out all along, that this White House meeting and official
act was conditioned upon Ukraine publicly announcing investigations. And that Sondland,
a top official, also believed that the withheld aid money,
that that would only flow to if the investigations were announced.
And so it's with that in front of them.
Why don't we take a five or ten minute break?
Thank you.
That shift abruptly gavels the hearing into a pause, somewhat inexplicably at first.
And then we quickly see why as he
walks out behind the chamber.
Just want to make a couple of quick observations while we're on a break here.
To a bank of cameras where he begins to talk about what just took place.
And what we have just heard from Ambassador Sondland is that the knowledge of this scheme
was a basic quid pro quo.
Which Hall, of course, carried it live in the middle of the proceedings.
And when he was done...
So, I think a very important moment in the history of this inquiry.
He wrapped up and walked right back into the hearing room and gaveled the thing back into session.
It wasn't lost on Devin Nunes, the top Republican on the committee who quickly called Schiff out.
Thank the gentlemen. For those of you watching at home, that was not a bathroom break.
That was actually a chance for the Democrats to go out and hold a press conference.
Ambassador for all the supposed bombshells that were in your opening testimony.
So there's quite a bit of bad blood, obviously, between the two sides,
but I don't think that this helped.
We'll be right back.
We'll be right back.
So once we're back, given that the Democrats have already sort of embraced the messiness and unreliability of Gordon Sondland and addressed it pretty directly, what is the Republican strategy when it's their turn to question him? Well, Republicans are looking at the same guy
and the same tendencies, and they see an amazing opportunity to weaponize it in defense of the
president. Hello again, Ambassador. Hi. So it's left to Steve Kasser, who's the Republicans'
lawyer in all of this, to start trying to do that work. I just want to go through some distinctions
between your opener and your deposition.
There's a phone call that Sondland has
where he says he was getting such mixed signals
and couldn't get answers about what Trump wanted from Ukraine
and why he was withholding the aid money.
And I was getting tired of going around in circles, frankly.
So I made the call.
And he asked President Trump, just kind of point blank, what do you want from Ukraine?
That's when I got the answer. He was unequivocal, nothing. The president tells him, I don't want to
quit pro quo. I don't want anything from Ukraine. They should just do what's right. They should do
what Zelensky said he was going to do. And Republicans kept going back to this call
again and again and again.
Stop me if there's anything sinister or nefarious in any of this. A vanilla request about corruption,
a call to say I'm on my way to Ukraine, a five-minute call you didn't remember is significant,
a call that you made where the president said, I want nothing, I want no quid pro quo,
I want Zelensky to do the right thing, I want him to do what he ran on. And him telling you to go tell Congress the truth.
Anything sinister or nefarious about any of that?
Not the way you present it.
Okay, and that is the truth.
Because in this case, as they pointed out,
you know, when the president is speaking directly to someone,
he's saying no quid pro quo.
I don't want anything in particular from the Ukrainians.
And you told Mr. Castor that the president never told you that the announcement had to happen to get anything.
In fact, he didn't just not tell you that.
He explicitly said the opposite.
So the most senior figure and the most involved figure in all this from the Trump administration,
who declares that this was a quid pro quo,
is simultaneously testifying that the president gets on the phone with him
and says, this is no quid pro quo.
That is complicated.
It is. It's very complicated.
And if you're listening at home
and listening to Republican questioning,
they're able, I think, to raise some doubts
about this account that he's giving.
And if you pull up CNN today,
right now their banner says,
Sondland ties Trump to withholding aid.
Is that your testimony today, Ambassador Sondland,
that you have evidence that Donald Trump
tied the investigation to the aid?
Because I don't think you're saying that.
And in this questioning, you know,
Sondland says, I didn't hear anything directly.
I've said repeatedly, Congressman,
I was presuming. I've said repeatedly, Congressman, I was presuming.
I also said that President Trump... So no one told you, not just the president.
Giuliani didn't tell you, Mulvaney didn't tell you,
nobody, Pompeo didn't tell you,
nobody else on this planet told you
that Donald Trump was tying aid to these investigations.
Is that correct?
I think I already testified. Answer the question,
yes or no. Yes. And Nick, why do you think that they are so focused on that? What the president
told him versus what he has concluded from all the information and conversations around him?
Republicans' argument is basically that if you're going to impeach the president,
you know, we need to know directly what his intentions were.
What he told you, that's evidence.
That's primary evidence.
What you concluded, I mean, that's no better than what we heard from other witnesses.
It's hearsay.
That's what I don't understand.
So you know what hearsay evidence is, Ambassador?
Hearsay is when I testify what someone else told me.
Do you know what made-up testimony is?
Made-up testimony is when I just presume it.
I mean, you're just assuming all of these things,
and then you're giving them the evidence
that they're running out and doing press conferences,
and CNN's headline is saying that you're saying
the president of the United States should be impeached
because he tied aid to investigations,
and you don't know that, correct?
I never said the president of the United States
should be impeached.
Nope, but you did.
So as this hearing starts to wind down after five or six hours of this back and forth,
after a pretty explosive and direct opening statement,
and then cross-examination and examination and more cross-examination,
spirits are starting to flag a little bit in the hearing room.
Mr. Maloney.
Mr. Ambassador, let's pick up right there.
There's an exchange near the end
with Sean Patrick Maloney, a Democrat of New York.
Let me ask you something.
Who would have benefited from an investigation
of the president's political opponents?
I don't want to characterize who would have
and who would not have.
I know you don't want to, sir.
That's my question.
Would you answer it for me?
And Maloney, you know, seeming to kind of burst forth with democratic frustration that's been
boiling beneath the surface all day, basically says... I guess I'm having trouble why you can't
just say... When he asked about investigations, I assumed he meant... I know what you assumed.
But who would benefit from an investigation of the Bidens?
I assume President Trump would
benefit. There we have it. See? Didn't hurt a bit, did it? But let me ask you something. Mr. Maloney.
Hold on, sir. Excuse me. I've been very forthright and I really resent what you're trying to do.
Fair enough. You've been very forthright. This is your third try to do so, sir.
resent what you're trying to do. Fair enough.
You've been very forthright.
This is your third try to do so, sir.
Didn't work so well the first time, did it?
And now we're here a third time,
and we got a doozy of a statement from you this morning.
There's a whole bunch of stuff you don't recall.
So all due respect, sir, we appreciate your candor,
but let's be really clear on what it took to get it out of you.
And that's kind of the tone as this hearing begins to come to an end.
Democrats are frustrated about some things. Democrats are frustrated about some things.
Republicans are frustrated about some things.
Sondland, who's trying to catch a flight back to Brussels, is certainly frustrated by some things.
And we've had a pretty complex and conflicting day of testimony where some people seem to be coming away quite happy, but not perfectly so.
quite happy, but not perfectly so. So is this unreliable witness turning out to be the most important witness in this inquiry, or is he just an unreliable witness? Well, the thing about
Sondland is that Democrats will tell you, you know, prosecutors successfully bring cases all
the time on highly flawed
witnesses who maybe don't even have a great history with the truth. But that doesn't mean
that what they're saying isn't true in a given scenario. And in this case, it's important to
remember what he's saying is incredibly politically inconvenient for him. He still
worked for the president of the United States, who we donated a bunch of money to and whose policies he believes in.
That that itself lends it some power and credibility.
Democrats seem to be emerging from today more comfortable and more certain that they need to bring forward this case of the president abusing his office,
of committing high crimes and misdemeanors worthy of impeachment
and putting it before the American people.
Thank you, Nick.
Thanks for having me, Michael.
For the next few weeks, we'll be covering the latest developments in the impeachment inquiry
in our new podcast. It's called The Latest. You can hear these episodes at the end of the day,
right here on The Daily.
Or subscribe to The Latest wherever you listen.
We'll be right back.
Here's what else you need to know today.
How did Ambassador Sutherland get there? You know, this is not a man who had any qualifications except one.
He wrote a check for a million dollars.
In the fifth Democratic presidential debate,
candidates expressed outrage over Wednesday's testimony in the impeachment inquiry,
with Senator Elizabeth Warren accusing President Trump of selling off key ambassadorships to
wealthy donors like Gordon Sondland. And that tells us about what's happening in Washington.
But with Mayor Pete Buttigieg now leading the polls in Iowa, the first state to pick a Democratic nominee.
Several of his rivals, including Senator Amy Klobuchar,
sought to challenge his credentials and experience.
Just like I have won statewide, and Mayor, I have all appreciation for your good work as a local official,
and you did not when you tried, I also have actually done this work.
I think experience should matter.
Buttigieg fired back,
suggesting that the federal experience of his opponents
was its own liability.
So first of all,
Washington experience is not the only experience that matters.
There's more than 100 years of Washington experience on this stage,
and where are we right now as a country?
That's it for The Daily. I'm Michael Barbaro.
See you tomorrow.