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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Conservative group to pressure Republicans to call out Trump over Ukraine

President Donald Trump speaks during a meeting at the InterContinental Barclay hotel during the United Nations General Assembly, Monday, Sept. 23, 2019, in New York. The conversation between Trump and Ukraine’s president is just one piece of the whistleblower’s overall complaint _ made in mid-August _ which followed Trump’s July 25 call. (Evan Vucci / AP)
By Lesley Clark McClatchy Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON – A conservative group is launching a series of ads this weekend urging House and Senate Republicans to condemn President Donald Trump for prodding the president of Ukraine to investigate a political rival.

Republicans for the Rule of Law will spend $1 million – its biggest ad buy to date – on a series of TV and digital ads that will target more than 20 members of Congress, including Sen. Richard Burr, R-N.C., the chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee.

“Republicans in Congress must condemn this behavior without reservation,” said Republicans for the Rule of Law legal adviser and spokesman Chris Truax. “It is no longer about whether Republicans believe President Trump or whether they support his policies. It’s about whether they support his admitted abuse of power and his efforts to secure a foreign government’s help in an American election. President Trump sees nothing wrong with his behavior.

”In fact, he’s proud of it. The question now is, are Republicans?“ Truax asked.

The 30-second ad calls Trump’s actions an ”abuse of power“ and warns it will happen again ”unless Republicans . stand up and say it’s wrong.“

The Senate intelligence committee has been looking into the matter and Burr, who led a closed-door committee meeting Thursday, has been circumspect.

”Don’t expect us to move at light speed; that’ll probably happen in the House,“ Burr said. ”But the committee is committed to making sure we get to the bottom of what questions need answered.“

The group in August sought to pressure Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell to put election security legislation up for a vote in the Senate, airing ads that targeted the Kentucky Republican and four other Republican senators in their home states. McConnell last week said he’ll back a measure to give states another $250 million to upgrade their voting systems to fend off foreign intervention.

The group’s members include former Weekly Standard editor Bill Kristol, a ”NeverTrump“ Republican who for months has encouraged primary challengers to Trump.

The ads come as House Speaker Nancy Pelosi announced this week that the House will launch a formal impeachment inquiry into Trump, charging that he’s betrayed his oath of office in asking Ukraine to open a corruption investigation of Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden and his son, Hunter.

Republicans have largely been supportive of Trump, criticizing Democrats for launching an impeachment inquiry before learning all the facts.

”Routine diplomacy,“ Rep. Andy Barr, R-Ky., told NPR of Trump’s request that Ukraine investigate Biden and his son’s involvement in Ukraine.

”Democrats don’t care what the transcript says or what the facts are because they’ve already promised their fringe, left-wing base that they’ll stop at nothing until they impeach our duly elected president,“ said Sen. Thom Tillis, R-N.C.