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This Article is From Sep 26, 2019

Trump Escalates Political Jeopardy With Release of Ukraine Call

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(Bloomberg) -- Donald Trump placed himself in deeper political jeopardy by ordering the release of a confidential memorandum recounting his July 25 call with Ukraine's president, a document showing the president imploring the leader of a country dependent on U.S. aid to help him smear a political rival.

Read the memorandum here. 

The memorandum -- which amounts to a rough transcript of the call -- reveals Trump wielding his powers as the country's chief executive to his personal benefit, either indifferent or oblivious to any consequences.

In a single phone call, Trump sought to enlist a foreign government's aid in his re-election campaign by investigating a person who was at the time the front-runner to challenge him; use his own personal lawyer to sidestep diplomatic channels; and deploy the top law enforcement officer in the U.S. to assist a patently political endeavor.

The call also illustrates the extent to which clever foreign leaders seek to ingratiate themselves with a U.S. president who made his fortune and reputation running a business built on his personal brand. The Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, noted to Trump that the last time he visited New York, he stayed at Trump Tower.

Trump's allies said the transcript clears the president because he didn't explicitly link U.S. aid to his request that Ukraine investigate his rival. And Zelenskiy said in a meeting with Trump on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly on Wednesday that “nobody pushed it” in their phone call.

Read more: Text of memorandum on Trump-Zelinskiy call

“We had, I think, good phone call,” Zelenskiy said in English. “It was normal. We spoke about many things.”

He later switched to Ukrainian and told reporters: “I don't owe anyone anything, you all understand.” He said that the country's new prosecutor-general, Ruslan Ryaboshapka, “should investigate whatever the cases. What kind of promises can there be?”

What Trump said during the 30-minute exchange with Zelenskiy has become central to an impeachment inquiry House Speaker Nancy Pelosi announced on Tuesday. Lawmakers are probing whether Trump pressured Ukraine to re-open a criminal inquiry linked to former Vice President Joe Biden's family in exchange for restoring U.S. military aid that Trump halted prior to the call.

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