Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump, left, talks the former New York City mayor Rudy Giuliani at a fundraising event in the Bronx borough of New York, Monday, July 6, 2015. Seth Wenig | AP

WASHINGTON — On the day that then-U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine Marie Yovanovitch was abruptly recalled from her post, President Donald Trump's personal lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, who led a campaign for Yovanovitch's removal, spoke to the White House 11 separate times. The day before that, on April 23, Giuliani placed three calls to the White House, and received one call back from an unidentified number, according to a sweeping new report published Tuesday by Democrats on the House Intelligence Committee. A few weeks before these calls, the report revealed, on April 12, there was a web of 27 separate calls involving various combinations of Giuliani, his indicted associate Lev Parnas, the top Republican on the House Intelligence Committee, Rep. Devin Nunes, former Trump attorney Victoria Toensing, then-columnist at The Hill John Solomon, the White House, and the Office of Management and Budget.

What was discussed on these calls is still unclear. But their inclusion in the 300-page report adds a remarkable new chapter to Democrats' account of a monthslong campaign to pressure Ukraine to announce investigations that would help Trump politically. Tuesday's report laid out in painstaking detail the evidence so far gathered by the Intelligence Committee in its impeachment inquiry into the president. The committee has spent the past two months investigating whether Trump abused his presidential powers by withholding foreign aid and a White House meeting from Ukraine unless the country's president agreed to launch investigations into Trump's domestic political opponents. According to the report's introduction, the committee "uncovered a months-long effort by President Trump to use the powers of his office to solicit foreign interference on his behalf in the 2020 election." The president's actions, they wrote, "subverted U.S. foreign policy toward Ukraine and undermined our national security in favor of two politically motivated investigations that would help his presidential reelection campaign." Much of what follows in the report has already been revealed in public testimony and closed-door depositions taken from more than a dozen witnesses over the course of October and November. These witnesses included current and former diplomats, national security officials, Trump political appointees and career staff from the Pentagon, the White House and the State Department. The unexpected call logs, however, paint a far more precise and damaging picture of what was occurring behind the scenes at the White House than has been previously known.

Giuliani's unexplained calls with OMB

They show, for instance, that Giuliani, who is not a government employee, was in frequent contact with the White House Office of Management and Budget, which carried out an order this summer that witnesses said came directly from Trump himself, to freeze $391 million in foreign and military aid to Ukraine. Trump and congressional Republicans have insisted since the beginning of the inquiry that the hold on aid to Ukraine was not connected to Giuliani's pressure campaign on Ukraine's president to launch investigations beneficial to Trump. But if there was, in fact, no connection, then it is unclear why the president's personal lawyer would have needed to speak repeatedly to OMB officials. On Wednesday, Giuliani posted two tweets that appeared to be his response to the phone logs. "The mere fact I had numerous calls with the White House does not establish any specific topic. Remember, I'm the President's attorney," Giuliani tweeted shortly before 8:00am. The former New York City mayor then followed up with a seemingly contradictory tweet, in which he implied that his calls with the White House were, in fact, related to events at issue in the impeachment probe. "They've already taken away [Trump's] right to call witnesses, cross-examine, confront his accusers, or be represented by counsel at hearings. Now he can't talk to his counsel on the telephone?" wrote Giuliani. The suggestion that the president's lawyers are being barred from impeachment hearings is not true, however. The White House has until December 6 to decide whether to participate in Judiciary Committee hearings, to which White House lawyers have been invited. But White House counsel Pat Cipollone has so far refused to do so, complaining in a recent letter to committee chairman Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y., that the hearings would not provide Trump with "any semblance of a fair process." Giuliani has not so far addressed why he was exchanging calls with OMB, an internally-focused budgeting agency which would appear to have little reason to communicate with the president's private lawyer. Trump Wednesday told reporters he did not know why his attorney was exchanging phone calls with the budget office, telling reporters at a NATO summit in London, "I really don't know. You'd have to ask [Giuliani]. It sounds like something that's not so complicated, frankly. But you'd have to ask him. No big deal." Intelligence Committee chairman Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., has so far declined to say how his committee obtained Giuliani's phone records. But Rep. Eric Swalwell, D-Calif., another member of the committee, confirmed during a recent TV appearance that the committee had issued subpoenas for third-party phone records, although he did not say who the targets of the subpoenas were.

New questions for Nunes