Democrats plot path forward on impeachment inquiry — live updates

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What you need to know about the Trump impeachment inquiry

House Democrats are planning to pursue new subpoenas for documents and testimony in their impeachment inquiry into President Trump, an escalation in a showdown with increasingly high stakes.

Attorneys representing the whistleblower who filed the complaint about the president’s July phone call with the president of Ukraine wrote in a letter obtained by “60 Minutes” that their client fears for his or her safety. The letter says a “$50,000 bounty” has been issued by unspecified individuals for information about the whistleblower’s identity.

Democratic lawmakers discussed the way forward on their impeachment inquiry on Sunday, even as members returned home for a two-week congressional recess.

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Schiff plans to subpoena Giuliani, expects whistleblower to testify

APTOPIX Congress Intelligence Whistleblower
House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff speaks to reporters at the Capitol in Washington on Thursday, September 19, 2019. J. Scott Applewhite / AP

6:00 a.m.: Congressman Adam Schiff, the chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, told “60 Minutes” he expects to subpoena Mr. Trump’s personal attorney Rudy Giuliani for information about his contacts with Ukraine and his work to encourage the country to open an investigation into former Vice President Joe Biden.

“We’re going to need evidence from Rudy Giuliani,” Schiff said. “And it’s our intention as soon as first thing next week to subpoena him for documents. And there may very well come a time where we want to hear from him directly.”

The chairman said the committee has “a pretty good road map, thanks to the courage of this whistleblower. The complaint sets out any number of witnesses, any number of documents that we need to seek.” Schiff and two other committee chairmen issued subpoenas for documents from Secretary of State Mike Pompeo on Friday.

Schiff also said the committee has an “agreement that [the whistleblower] will testify,” but lawyers for the individual said in Sunday that no time or date has been set and that talks are continuing. — Stefan Becket

Whistleblower fears for safety, lawyers say

5:30 a.m.: A letter from attorneys for the whistleblower says their client fears for his or her safety, and that individuals have issued a “$50,000 bounty” for information on the identity of the whistleblower.

The whistleblower’s legal team sent the letter to the acting director of national intelligence, Joseph Maguire. It says the events of the past week have heightened concerns that the whistleblower’s identity will be revealed and, as a result, he or she could be “put in harm’s way.” The letter also thanked Maguire’s office for activating “appropriate resources” to ensure the whistleblower’s safety.

Read the letter here.

Majority of Americans support impeachment inquiry, CBS News poll finds

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5:00 a.m.: A CBS News poll released Sunday found that more than half of Americans — and an overwhelming number of Democrats — say they approve of the fact that Congress has opened an impeachment inquiry, but there is no national consensus on how to assess the president’s actions.

Partisans have immediately and predictably split: most Democrats call the president’s handling of matters with Ukraine illegal, and deserving of impeachment.

Most Republicans call his actions proper — or, even if improper, then still legal — and feel they’re an example of things that past presidents typically did, too. Most Americans think that because Congress is now taking up the matter, it will be unable to work on other issues.

Read more from the poll here.

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