FiveThirtyEight
Chadwick Matlin

Castro now just reading the call summary out loud, which reminds me of when Democrats asked Mueller to testify so that they could put what was otherwise just a written document in a TV-ready format.

Chadwick Matlin

Rep. Castro is trying to establish the veracity of the whistleblower complaint by noting that the call summary released yesterday matched what the whistleblower alleged had happened. This is the kind of groundwork I expected Democrats to lay.

Micah Cohen

Business Insider and SurveyMonkey must have been reading your mind, Nathaniel, on wanting an impeachment question that gave respondents info about the process. They asked: “Impeachment is the first step in the process of removing a president from office. Do you think the House of Representatives should impeach President Trump?”
Forty-five percent said yes; 30 percent said no.
When the question was phrased around starting an impeachment inquiry, it got a bit more support. SurveyMonkey asked, “Do you believe launching a formal impeachment inquiry into President Trump for soliciting foreign interference in a US election is the right thing to do?” And a majority (53 percent) said either “definitely yes” (33 percent) or “probably yes” (20 percent).

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