House impeaches President Trump in historic vote, setting the stage for Senate trial

Show Caption Hide Caption The House of Representatives has voted to impeach President Trump The House approved both articles President Trump was being accused of for impeachment, making him the third impeached president in U.S. history.

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President Donald Trump has become the third president in history to be impeached after the House voted to approve both articles of impeachment over his request of Ukraine to investigate political rivals.

After a day of tense debate and fiery recriminations, the House voted largely along partisan lines, reshuffling American politics at time when voters are profoundly divided over the nation’s leadership and direction.

The Democratic-led House approved both articles of impeachment accusing Trump of abusing his power by asking Ukrainian officials to announce investigations that would benefit his reelection and of obstructing Congress.

As the House voted, Trump rallied onstage in Michigan.

Every Democrat voted for the first article except Reps. Jefferson Van Drew of New Jersey and Collin Peterson of Minnesota. Rep. Jared Golden of Maine joined Van Drew and Peterson as the only Democrats to vote against the second article, obstruction of Congress.

Every Republican voted against both articles. The House’s lone independent, former Republican Justin Amash of Michigan, voted with the Democrats to impeach Trump on both charges.

The 230 votes to impeach Trump on the first article is slightly higher than the 228 votes that one of the articles against President Bill Clinton received in 1998.

But Republicans are gleeful about the fact that, unlike in 1998, no one on their side crossed party lines to vote to impeach one of their own.

"Every single Republican voted for us," Trump crowed at his rally. “We didn't lose one Republican vote."

Lawmakers are now voting on a second article, charging Trump with obstructing their investigation.

Though the historic vote ended a hurried effort by Democrats to advance impeachment articles before the end of the year – House Speaker Nancy Pelosi launched the inquiry into Trump’s actions less than three months ago – it will kick off an exceptionally rare trial in the Senate to determine whether the president will be removed from office.

Republican leaders expect that trial to begin in mid-January.

The White House responds

White House press secretary Stephanie Grisham said the impeachment culminated in one of the most shameful episodes in history.

“Throughout the House Democrats’ entire sham impeachment, the President was denied fundamental fairness and due process under the law,” Grisham said in a statement. “The House blatantly ignored precedent and conducted the inquiry in secrecy behind closed doors so that Chairman Adam Schiff and his partisan political cronies could selectively leak information to their partners in the media to push a false narrative. “

“The President is confident the Senate will restore regular order, fairness, and due process, all of which were ignored in the House proceedings,” Grisham said. “He is prepared for the next steps and confident that he will be fully exonerated. President Trump will continue to work tirelessly to address the needs and priorities of the American people, as he has since the day he took office.”

-Bart Jansen

Tulsi Gabbard voted 'present'

Rep. Tulsi Gabbard, D-Hawaii, who voted present on both articles of impeachment, said she worked for the best interests of the country whether in the military or in Congress.

“After doing my due diligence in reviewing the 658-page impeachment report, I came to the conclusion that I could not in good conscience vote either yes or no,” Gabbard said in a statement. “I am standing in the center and have decided to vote Present. I could not in good conscience vote against impeachment because I believe President Trump is guilty of wrongdoing. I also could not in good conscience vote for impeachment because removal of a sitting President must not be the culmination of a partisan process, fueled by tribal animosities that have so gravely divided our country.”

-Bart Jansen

Voting with cards

Some lawmakers used cards to vote, rather than recording their preference electronically as is usually the practice.

“They want to actually write down their vote instead of doing it electronically on a vote of this gravity and significance,” said Rep. Katherine Clark, D-Mass, who voted electronically.

Republicans rushed to grab the red cards, using a dais to scribble their names, state and district before waving them above their hands.

Rep. Steve King, R-Iowa, said the red and green cards were being used as “more of a demonstration” to show the force behind the vote.

“It’s pretty lame, but it’s what we got,” King said of the demonstration.

-Nicholas Wu, Christal Hayes

Closing arguments

The debate drew to a close with final remarks from party leaders – some of which elicited immediate pushback from the other side.

Minority Whip Steve Scalise, R-La., drew groans from Democrats when he accused them of not only hating Trump, but also hating the 63 million Americans who voted for him. Republicans groaned back.

“It is an abuse of power,” Scalise said. “It’s your abuse of power.”

House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, D-Md., said Trump was given every opportunity to prove his innocence.

“Democrats did not choose this impeachment. We did not wish for it,” he said. "Oh, come on," several Republicans responded.

Lawmakers filled the House floor and most seats in the spectator gallery were taken when House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., taunted his Democratic colleagues with something he said they hate to hear.

“Donald J. Trump is president of the United States,” McCarthy said, eliciting a standing ovation from his GOP colleagues. “He’s president today. He will be president tomorrow. And he will be president when this impeachment is over.”

Throughout Rep. Adam Schiff’s speech, he looked at Republicans, speaking directly to them as he implored for them to uphold the Constitution over their loyalty to the president.

“What is at risk here is the very idea of America,” he said.

Republicans, in response, booed Schiff, some laughing or shouting things at him.

-Maureen Groppe, Bart Jansen and Christal Hayes

Voting begins

After a full day of contentious debate and without a closing comment from Pelosi, the House began voting at 8:09pm on the first of two articles of impeachment: whether Trump committed an abuse of power by pressuring Ukraine to undertake investigations that would help him politically.

Democrats are expected to have the 216 votes needed to pass the article. All Republicans are expected to oppose it.

The chamber is full enough many lawmakers and staffers from both parties are standing in the back of their respective sides.

Some of the moderate Democrats who have the most at stake politically and who helped tipped Pelosi’s hand on beginning the impeachment inquiry entered the chamber together shortly before the voting began.

“See you on the other end,” said Rep. Elissa Slotkin, D-Mich., who represents a district Trump won in 2016.

One Democrat, freshman Rep. Jared Golden of Maine, has said he will vote for the first article but not for the second, which charges Trump with obstructing Congress in its investigation.“We have bipartisan opposition to impeachment, not bipartisan support,” said Rep. Mark Meadows, R-N.C.

Trump onstage in Michigan

Trump struck an upbeat tone after arriving in Battle Creek for a rally as the House neared conclusion of the impeachment debate.

“Doing good,” he said to shouted questions from reporters as he deplaned from Air Force One and climbed into his limousine.

About 150 people who’d braved Michigan’s below-freezing temperatures to wait for Trump’s arrival cheered him on.

- Maureen Groppe

The `Schiff show’

After calling impeachment an embarrassment for House Democrats, Rep. Lee Zeldin, R-N.Y., laid into House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff.

Zeldin repeated GOP complaints about the way Schiff handled the impeachment inquiry, concluding: “It’s a total Schiff show.”

Zeldin is not the first Republican to use that wordplay on Schiff’s last name.

In November, Trump was even more explicit when he tweeted: “Gee, Pelosi & Schitt have a good idea, ‘lets Impeach the President.’”

For his part, Schiff smiled as he returned to the microphone after Zeldin's remarks.

– Maureen Groppe

From a 'perfect' call to a party switch: How we got to the impeachment of Donald Trump

Republicans boo Adam Schiff

Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff, D-Calif., tried to rebut the Republican argument that there's no impeachable offense because Ukraine eventually received the delayed military funds.

“My colleagues continue to make the argument that the Ukrainians got the money,” Schiff said. “Yes, the president got caught but they got the money, no harm, no foul. It’s the equivalent of saying, `If you’re pulled over by a cop and you attempt to bribe the cop, and the cop doesn’t take the money but arrests you, where’s the crime in that?'”

Schiff's comments drew booing from the Republican side of the chamber.

– Nicholas Wu

A former Republican speaks

Michigan Rep. Justin Amash, an independent who left the Republican Party last summer, was welcomed on the Democratic side of the House with pats on the shoulder and handshakes from smiling colleagues after saying he would vote to impeach Trump.

“His actions reflect precisely the type of conduct the framers of the Constitution intended to remedy through the power of impeachment,” Amash said.

He was the only Republican in the House to call for Trump’s impeachment following the release of special counsel Robert Mueller's investigation into Russian involvement in the 2016 election and its aftermath earlier this year.

Amash said Wednesday that Trump abused and violated the public trust by soliciting the aid of a foreign power for his own personal and political gain.

He told USA TODAY after his floor remarks that he might have been able to convince his former Republican colleagues to vote for impeachment earlier in the process. But, Amash added, “The deeper we’ve gotten into it, the more people feel like they have to stick with their team, if you will, to survive.”

Some Democrats have approached Amash about helping present the case against Trump when the proceedings move to the Senate.

Asked if he’s interested in being an impeachment manager, Amash replied: “I’m happy to have a conversation with the speaker.”

– Maureen Groppe, Bart Jansen and Nicholas Wu

Schiff: ‘A chance to cheat in the next election’

While House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has been the Democrats’ face of impeachment, Adam Schiff has been the workhorse of the effort.

As chair of the House Intelligence Committee, the California Democrat led the sharp questioning of key witnesses that laid out Trump’s role in Ukraine. And he has been able to succinctly articulate the complexities of the committee’s findings to the public.

Halfway through Wednesday’s floor debate, Schiff stepped up to the dais to summarize the testimony and characterize the president as someone consumed by personal advancement.

“He doesn’t care about Ukraine or the impact on our national security caused by withholding military aid to that country fighting for its democratic life,” he said. “All that matters to this president is what affects him personally: an investigation into his political rival and a chance to cheat in the next election.”

Later, Schiff turned to his GOP colleagues and chided them for choosing party over country.

“Many of my colleagues appear to have made their choice to protect the president, to enable him to be above the law, to empower this president to cheat again as long as it is in the service of their party and their power,” he said. “They have made their choice and I believe they will rue the day that they did.”

Getting testy

One of the most fiery exchanges came after Rep. Louie Gohmert, R-Texas, accused Democrats of using impeachment to stop an investigation into Ukraine’s interference in the 2016 election.

Democrats have noted that U.S. intelligence services found that Russia meddled in the election and FBI Director Christopher Wray told ABC News that there is “no information that indicates that Ukraine interfered with the 2016 presidential election.”

Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerry Nadler, D-N.Y., said it was “deeply concerned that any member of the House would spout Russian propaganda on the floor of the House.”

Russia has blamed Ukraine for its own interference in the election.

Gohmert, who was still at his lectern, pointed at Nadler and said he should get a chance to respond, but he wasn't recognized.

"He calls me guilty of Russian propaganda," Gohmert shouted over the pounding of the gavel. Gohmert walked past Nadler as he left the chamber for a brief exchange.

– Bart Jansen

Rep. Jeff Van Drew plans to vote as a Democrat against impeachment

Rep. Jeff Van Drew, D-N.J., told reporters an announcement on his party change was coming soon.

"I'm thinking this through, how I want to announce it,” he said. “Then I’m going to announce whatever I do, and at that point in time, I will make a decision and make an announcement.

"We'll see," he said when asked if he had requested a ceremony at the White House to switch parties.

Van Drew said he would still be voting as a Democrat against impeachment today.

It was a clumsy way, a serious way to remove a president from office, and we should be careful,” he said. “Let’s just have an election. Let the people decide on this.”

- Nicholas Wu

Republican: Crucifixion of Christ was fairer

Rep. Barry Loudermilk, R-Ga., upped the ante on Republicans’ argument that the impeachment process has been unfair to Trump.

“One week before Christmas, I want you to keep this in mind,” Loudermilk said during floor debate. “Pontius Pilate afforded more rights to Jesus than the Democrats have afforded this president.”

Specifically, Loudermilk said, Pilate gave Jesus the opportunity to face his accusers.

The House committees didn't allow Trump or his representatives to participate in the closed-door depositions or public hearings. The Judiciary Committee invited Trump to participate in its hearings, but White House counsel Pat Cipollone declined, calling the inquiry partisan and biased.

Kellyanne Conway, a special advisor to Trump speaking at the White House, said, "I don't like many Jesus comparisons because he is my Lord and Savior."

Trump also compared the impeachment process to the Salem witch trials in a Tuesday letter to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

"More due process was afforded to those accused in the Salem Witch Trials,” Trump complained in the six-page letter.

- Maureen Groppe

Graham wants 'shortest trial possible' in Senate

Speaking at a press conference, Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., said he wanted the “shortest trial possible” for Trump.

Graham, the chair of the Senate Judiciary Committee, said he would not support witnesses called by only one side.

“I’m not going to support witnesses being called for by the president,” he said. “I’m not going to support witnesses being called for by Senator Schumer,” referring the Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y.

He said he would invite Trump’s personal attorney Rudy Giuliani to testify before his committee, adding, “It’s just not good for your country to make these accusations on national television.”

Graham said he talked to the president and the First Lady today.

When he asked Trump how he was doing, Graham said Trump replied, “Well I’m being impeached. Other than that I’m doing okay.”

- Nicholas Wu

GOP critic of Trump to oppose impeachment

Florida Rep. Francis Rooney, one of the few Republicans to publicly criticize President Donald Trump’s conduct concerning Ukraine, has decided not to support impeachment.

The congressman said he wanted the courts to rule first on the president's claims of "executive privilege" preventing Congress from accessing documents and testimony before he could support impeachment.

"Having asked numerous ex-White House Counsels and well-known government attorneys, there can be no 'obstruction of Congress (or of justice)' while the person refusing to comply is relying on a claim of executive privilege," Rooney said in a statement released Wednesday afternoon.

“Based on the limited evidence provided to the House of Representatives, the President’s behavior, while inappropriate, was neither criminal, nor does it rise to the level of justifying impeachment," he said.

In October, Rooney told CNN the situation was “certainly very, very serious and troubling. I don't think you can rule (impeachment) out until you know all the facts."

The next day, he told Fox News he would not seek a third term in 2020, following a torrent of criticism from Republicans who view his willingness to question Trump’s conduct as tantamount to betrayal.

Rooney’s decision to oppose both articles of impeachment denies Democrats a chance to lure a House Republican to their side.

- Ledyard King

Trump calls impeachment 'assault on America'

In the middle of impeachment debate on the House floor, Trump attacked Democrats and their effort to impeach him on Twitter.

"SUCH ATROCIOUS LIES BY THE RADICAL LEFT, DO NOTHING DEMOCRATS. THIS IS AN ASSAULT ON AMERICA, AND AN ASSAULT ON THE REPUBLICAN PARTY!!!!," he tweeted.

The president steadily tweeted and re-tweeted – mostly about impeachment – at least two dozen times by 1 p.m. EST

- Courtney Subramanian

Trump tweets: President calls impeachment accusations 'atrocious lies' as House vote looms

Tulsi Gabbard, others miss rules vote

Five House members missed the vote on setting the rules for the impeachment debate, including Rep. Tulsi Gabbard, one of the Democrats seeking the presidential nomination to take on Trump in 2020.

Gabbard’s office didn’t immediately explain her absence. Gabbard hasn’t voted on the House floor since Dec. 11 and has missed more than one-third of floor votes this year.

Gabbard, who has declined to say whether she supports either article of impeachment, introduced a resolution Wednesday to censure Trump. (A censure resolution expresses strong disapproval of conduct, whereas impeachment could result in removal from office.)

Among the others who missed one of the day’s major votes, retiring Rep. Jose Serrano, D-N.Y., has been absent due to illness; Rep. Duncan Hunter, R-Calif., was barred from voting after pleading guilty this month to campaign finance violations; and retiring Rep. John Shimkus is visiting his son in Tanzania.

While Rep. Ruben Gallego, D-Ariz., missed the vote on approving the debate rules, he sided with his party minutes before in the procedural step calling for the vote.

- Maureen Groppe and Nicholas Wu

Pelosi: 'He gave us no choice'

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi “solemnly and sadly” opened the debate with a floor speech that drew on the nation’s founders and the reason they enshrined impeachment in the Constitution.

“Our founders’ vision of a republic is under threat from actions from the White House,” she said. “If we do not act now, we would be derelict in our duty. It’s tragic the president’s reckless actions make impeachment necessary. He gave us no choice.”

Pinned to the front of her dress was a replica of the mace of the House, the symbol of the chamber's power that stands next to where the speaker sits on the dais.

As she spoke about the danger of foreign interference in U.S. elections, the speaker stood next to a white poster board of a fluttering American flag with the words: “To the Republic for which it stands…”

“Today, we are here to defend democracy for the people,” she said. “May god bless America.”

As she finished, Democrats in the chamber applauded. Republicans did not.

- Ledyard King

Collins: The people 'see through this'

Democratic lawmakers emptied out of the chamber after Pelosi's speech, leaving mostly members of the House Judiciary Committee and their aides.

Leading off the GOP rebuttal, Georgia Rep. Doug Collins said the Founding Fathers were concerned about a partisan impeachment process in which the majority could do what it wants.

Collins dismissed the first article of impeachment – abuse of power – by saying Trump did nothing wrong. He described the second article – obstruction of Congress – as akin to petulant children saying they didn’t get what they wanted when they didn’t ask in the right way.

Fellow Republicans nodded as Collins said the GOP will take their case to American voters.

“It is a matter for the voters, not this House. Not in this way,” Collins said. “The people of America see through this.”

- Maureen Groppe

Stewart: 'They hate this president'

Rep. Chris Stewart, R-Utah, said Democrats’ objective with impeachment was not to help fulfill a Constitutional duty, but a move taken because they wanted Hillary Clinton to win the election.

“It’s shocking, I know, but it turns out some people don’t like President Trump,” he said. “Let’s be clear, this vote, this day has nothing to do with Ukraine. It has nothing to do with abuse of power. It has nothing to do with obstruction of Congress.”

Stewart said Wednesday was about one thing: “They hate this president,” he said, adding, “They think Hillary Clinton should be president.”

After his remarks, Nadler had a reminder for Stewart. “If President Trump is impeached and removed, the new president will be Mike Pence, not Hillary Clinton," drawing laughs and cheers from Republicans on the House floor.

In Michigan, Pence pushes back

As debate on the impeachment articles got underway, Vice President Mike Pence began making the case to Michigan voters that will be amplified at Trump’s rally tonight in Battle Creek.

"Truthfully, friends, what's happening on Capitol Hill today is a disgrace,” Pence said at an event organized by the Trump campaign at a Sheraton in Saginaw. Dozens of rank-and-file union members were invited to attend by a Workers for Trump Coalition.

A man holding an “Impeach Trump” sign stood alone at the hotel entrance when reporters traveling with the vice president arrived at the site. A small group of onlookers snapped photos of the Trump-Pence mega bus.

Inside the hotel, Pence said Democrats are trying to impeach Trump because they can’t defeat him.

Michigan was one of the three “blue wall” states that fell to Trump in 2016, assuring his victory.

Trump will take the stage tonight around the time the House could be holding the final impeachment votes.

- Maureen Groppe

House approves impeachment debate rules

After about an hour of discussion, the House voted 228 to 197 to set the rules for debating the two articles of impeachment against Trump. There will be up to six hours of debate with no amendments allowed.

The rules were approved after Democrats rejected Republicans'' attempts to block debate on the impeachment articles until certain conditions are met - including allowing Republicans to have their own impeachment hearing.

Lawmakers voted along party lines with the exception of the two Democrats who opposed the impeachment inquiry from the start: Minnesota Rep. Collin Peterson and New Jersey Rep. Jefferson Van Drew, who is expected to switch parties.

Before the vote, Oklahoma Rep. Tom Cole, the Rules Committee’s top Republican, gave a rare compliment in the intensely-partisan debate by thanking Chairman Jim McGovern, D-Mass., for how he conducted Tuesday’s committee hearing on the rules package.

“Let me thank my friend for his kind words,” McGovern responded, before likewise thanking Cole for his leadership.

But there the friendliness ended.

Cole called the impeachment inquiry unfair, rushed, closed and a “complete charade.”

McGovern said that the central question is whether a president should be allowed to ask a foreign nation to interfere in an election.

“I ask my colleagues to search their souls before casting their votes,” McGovern said.

- Maureen Groppe

Protesters descend on Capitol

Outside the Capitol, a hearty crowd of about 200 demonstrators – bundled up in hats and scarves to brave the 33-degree winter day – waved homemade signs labeling Trump a “criminal-in-chief” and a “fake president.”

“What a beautiful day … A beautiful day for our democracy,” declared Nathaly Arriola, executive director of Need to Impeach, whose mission is self-explanatory. The organization was founded and is funded by Democratic presidential candidate Tom Steyer.

“This has never been about the politics,” she said. “This has always been about the American people, and about protecting the democracy that allows us to live freely as Americans in this nation.”

But she quickly pivoted to politics, declaring that her group would be delivering hand-held mirrors to vulnerable Republican senators – such as Colorado’s Cory Gardner and Maine’s Susan Collins – adorned with the message: “Senator, how corrupt is too corrupt for you?”

The purpose of the mirrors was obvious, but she spelled it out for anyone who might need elaboration.

“Soon they will have to look at themselves in the mirror and ask themselves” whether they convict or acquit Trump. A failure to convict, she said, would amount to a betrayal of the U.S. Constitution.

“And Americans will hold them accountable,” she added.

- Deirdre Shesgreen

Debate begins on how to proceed

Massachusetts Rep. Jim McGovern, the chairman of the House Rules Committee, introduced the rules for the debate, calling the proceedings a “Democracy defining moment.”

“We are being tested on something greater than our ability to toe the party line,” McGovern said.

Dismissing as “absurd” the GOP charge that Democrats are trying to overturn the results of the 2016 election, McGovern said failing to rebuke Trump would set a dangerous precedent.

Oklahoma Rep. Tom Cole, the Rules Committee’s top Republican, countered that the premise of the impeachment articles is based on a “pause of 55 days” on military assistance to Ukraine. Cole argued there’s no evidence that the aid was a “quid pro quo” to get Ukraine to investigate former Vice President Joe Biden.

“I oppose this limited and unfair process,” Cole said, “and I certainly oppose impeaching the president of the United States.”

Rep. Donna Shalala, D-Fla., who served as President Bill Clinton’s Health and Human Services Secretary, told reporters she found impeachment “painful.”

“None of us came here to impeach a president,” she said.

- Maureen Groppe and Nicholas Wu

Tourists there to witness debate

Karon Jahn, a 69-year-old retired professor from Alaska, took advantage of the auspicious timing of her family’s visit to the nation’s capital to give her two 14-year-old grandsons an up-close lesson in American democracy.

“We looked up the fact that it needs two-thirds vote in the Senate,” Jahn said of the super-majority required for Trump to be convicted and removed from office. The boys are seeing “in real time” what they’ve already learned in school, she added.

Asked if she supported Trump’s impeachment personally, she said yes, framing the argument more succinctly than most of the Democrats on the House floor: “We didn't elect people to do the wrong thing.”

For Lin Huang, a 31-year-old Chinese student studying computer engineering at Texas A&M University, the process was a bit more bewildering.

“We feel quite curious about this,” he said as he waited in line to enter the public spectator’s gallery with his wife and in-laws. Huang said he was “not quite sure” what the impeachment debate was about, but he was eager to watch the proceedings anyway.

Amanda Lopez and Travis Tilghman, who were visiting Washington from California, said they were thrilled their visit coincided with the House impeachment debate.

“We’ve both been binge watching the West Wing, so we’ve been looking at democracy again,” said Lopez, a 31-year-old who works in the tech industry.

“It’s corrupt,” said Tilghman, 35

Another GOP protest fails

After failing to stop the proceedings, House Republicans sought a vote on a resolution accusing the Democrats who led the impeachment inquiry of abusing their power.

The resolution included a litany of complaints against Intelligence Chairman Adam Schiff, D-Calif., who ran the impeachment hearings, and Judiciary Chairman Jerry Nadler, D-N.Y., who oversaw debate over the impeachment articles.

The House voted 226 to 191 to block the resolution, Rep. Collin Peterson, D-Minn., was the only Democrat to vote with Republicans.

An hour into the proceedings, the spectator galleries overlooking the floor were not full.

Outside the Capitol, journalists with large cameras patrolled the entrances while a handful of protesters held signs, one reading, "too much corruption to fit on one sign!"

- Maureen Groppe, Bart Jansen and Christal Hayes

GOP motion to adjourn fails

Shortly after the House gaveled in, Republicans unsuccessfully tried to stop the proceedings.

Rep. Andy Biggs, R-Ariz., asked that the House adjourn "so we can stop wasting America's time for impeachment."

The motion was dismissed on a party-line vote of 226 to 188.

It was just the first of many procedural votes Republicans could force throughout the all-day impeachment debate.

A vote on both articles of impeachment isn't expected until later this evening.

"Help them, and help us all," House Chaplain Patrick Conroy said of House members when he opened the day's session with a prayer.

- Maureen Groppe, Christal Hayes and Michael Collins

Pelosi: 'Join me on the floor'

Expect a full House when the chamber convenes at 9 a.m.

In a letter to colleagues Tuesday night, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi urged everyone to "join me on the floor." The letter also aims to set a tone of solemnity.

"Our constituents look to us to be respectful of the Constitution and Defenders of our Democracy and to proceed in a manner worthy of our oath of office to support and defend the Constitution of the United States," Pelosi wrote.

In other words, no cheering or clapping during the votes.

Trump weighed in early with his usual mode of communication, a tweet.

“Can you believe that I will be impeached today by the Radical Left, Do Nothing Democrats, AND I DID NOTHING WRONG!” he tweeted at 7:34 a.m.

House Republicans signaled they are likely to press for a procedural vote even before the House officially begins debate on impeachment.

Among the first to arrive was Rules Committee Chairman Jim McGovern, D-Mass., who took a seat behind the Democratic lectern, preparing to debate the rules for floor debate on the two articles of impeachment.

Two Judiciary Committee Democrats who sent the articles to the floor – Reps. Sylvia Garcia of Texas and Steve Cohen of Tennessee – grabbed front-row seats in the chamber, chatting.

Rep. Al Green, D-Texas, one of the earliest advocates of an impeachment inquiry, walked over to shake hands with Rep. Mark Meadows, R-N.C., one of the president's most vocal defenders.

- Maureen Groppe and Bart Jansen

Tulsi Gabbard introduces censure resolution

On the day the House of Representatives was to debate and vote on articles of impeachment against Trump, Rep. Tulsi Gabbard, D-Hawaii, introduced a resolution to censure him.

A censure resolution expresses strong disapproval of conduct, whereas impeachment could result in removal from office.

The resolution was referred to the Judiciary Committee and is unlikely to get a vote in the House.

The introduction of the resolution comes as even most moderate Democrats in the House have announced their intention to vote for the articles of impeachment. Nearly a dozen House Democrats had floated censure as an option, as reported by Politico but have since backed away from it.

Gabbard has declined to say whether she will vote for either article of impeachment.

- Nicholas Wu

Colorado lawmaker to preside over floor debate

Rep. Diana DeGette, D-Colo., will preside over much of the impeachment proceedings on the House floor Wednesday.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi tapped the 12-term legislator from Denver for the prestigious task of what’s known as “speaker pro tempore,” which includes ruling on the points of order that guide floor debate.

“None of us came to Congress to impeach a president, but every one of us – when we assumed office – took an oath to uphold the constitution,” DeGette said. “This is a sad and somber moment in our nation’s history and the responsibility to preside over this important debate is something I will not take lightly.”

- Ledyard King

How the vote will happen

The House will debate the articles for six hours and then vote separately on each of them, under parameters that the House Rules Committee recommended Tuesday. The rules for floor debate must still be adopted by the full House after an hour of debate Wednesday morning. If the House approves the articles, lawmakers will immediately take up a resolution naming managers who will serve essentially as prosecutors in the Senate trial, which is expected to begin in January.

Democrats hold a 233-197 majority in the House, with one independent and four vacancies, and the votes on the articles are expected to largely follow party lines. Republican leaders have said they expect all of their members to oppose impeachment.

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Rep. Justin Amash, an independent from Michigan, is expected to vote with Democrats in favor of impeachment. One Democrat, Rep. Jeff Van Drew of New Jersey, announced he would vote against it and he might switch parties. Another Democrat, Rep. Jared Golden of Maine, told the Bangor Daily News he would support impeachment for abuse of power, but not obstruction of Congress. And a few Democrats, including Reps. Tulsi Gabbard of Hawaii, Ron Kind of Wisconsin and Collin Peterson of Minnesota, haven't announced how they will vote.

The Judiciary Committee recommended by party-line vote the articles that accused Trump of pressuring Ukraine to investigate his political rival, former Vice President Joe Biden. The committee also accused Trump of obstructing their work by directing aides and agencies to defy congressional subpoenas for documents and testimony.

"He acted in a way that rises to the level of impeachment," said House Rules Committee Chairman Jim McGovern, D-Mass., whose panel set the rules Tuesday for floor debate.

But Trump attacked the investigation Tuesday as an attempted partisan coup and urged House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., to call off the vote. Congressional Republicans called the Intelligence Committee investigation "flawed" and "defective," in the words of Rep. Tom Cole of Oklahoma.

The three committees investigating Ukraine – Foreign Affairs, Intelligence, and Oversight and Reform – didn't allow Trump or his representatives to participate in their closed-door depositions or public hearings, but the time for Democratic and Republican questions was equally divided. The Judiciary Committee invited Trump to participate in its hearings, but White House counsel Pat Cipollone declined, calling the inquiry partisan and biased.

“The entire circus has been politically motivated from the very beginning," said Cole, the top Republican on the Rules Committee.

If the House approves one or both of the articles, the Senate will hold a trial to decide whether to convict Trump and remove him from office. A two-thirds majority of the Senate is required for removal, which is considered unlikely with Republicans holding a 53-47 majority in the chamber.

Only two other presidents have faced Senate impeachment trials – Andrew Johnson in 1868 and Bill Clinton in 1999 – and neither was removed from office. Former President Richard Nixon resigned in 1974 before a House vote on articles of impeachment.

Anti-impeachment ad blitz: Donald Trump's allies target Democrats in swing districts

Trump sent Pelosi a six-page letter expressing his “most powerful protest against the partisan impeachment crusade” and urging her not to hold a vote on "this impeachment fantasy."

“This impeachment represents an unprecedented and unconstitutional abuse of power by Democrat Lawmakers, unequaled in nearly two and a half centuries of American legislative history,” Trump said.

The president said more due process was provided during the Salem witch trials than during this inquiry, which he called “nothing more than an illegal, partisan attempted coup.”

“They include no crimes, no misdemeanors, and no offenses whatsoever,” Trump said. “You have cheapened the importance of the very ugly word, impeachment!”

But Rep. Jamie Raskin, D-Md., who presented the Judiciary Committee's report to the Rules Committee, said the investigation by the Foreign Affairs, Intelligence, and Oversight and Reform panels gathered overwhelming evidence against Trump from thousands of pages of documents and 100 hours of depositions with 17 sworn witnesses.

"These articles charge that President Trump has engaged in systematic abuse of his powers, obstructed Congress, and realized the worst fears of the Framers by subordinating our national security and dragging foreign powers into American politics to corrupt our elections, all for the greater cause of his own personal gain and ambition," Raskin said.

USA TODAY Poll: Impeached or not, Trump leads his Democratic rivals for another term