Trump may survive impeachment - but voters will deliver ultimate verdict

Trump may survive impeachment - but voters will deliver ultimate verdict The reality is that the American public will deliver the ultimate verdict at the ballot box in November next year.

Image: Donald Trump has been accused of abusing his position for personal gain

It has been 21 years since Americans have been able to watch the behaviour of their president pulled apart in televised impeachment hearings.

If they were watching this time, they would have seen Donald Trump's integrity questioned in the dry, methodical assessment of two seasoned diplomatic professionals.

George Kent and Bill Taylor provided chapter and verse on what they saw in dealings between Trump's White House and Ukraine - their testimony drawn from extensive and exhaustive note-taking at the time.

They alleged military aid and political support had been held hostage to Trump's demands for an investigation into his political rival, Joe Biden.

They also saw an "irregular" back channel conducting a US shadow foreign policy.


Image: Members of the House Intelligence Committee listen to evidence

Taylor - a Vietnam War veteran and career diplomat - said he was "astonished", saw the conduct as "crazy" and threatened to resign.

His testimony may prove far more damaging than his resignation.

Kent, a State Department expert on Ukraine, said what he witnessed was "unfortunate" and "unexpected" - damning terms in the cautious world of diplomacy.

Most significant of all was Taylor's evidence of a direct connection between Trump himself and the push for Ukraine to play ball.

Image: Senior diplomat William Taylor has been speaking before the hearing

Taken on its face, the evidence was powerful confirmation of the central charge; that Donald Trump abused his position for personal gain.

Yet the chances of the president being removed from office as a result are almost zero.

Republicans tried their best to dent the case against Trump, with little success. But they know they probably won't be able to stop him being impeached by a Democrat-controlled House if Representatives.

But when that impeachment trial takes place in a Republican-controlled Senate, the Democrats stand little chance of mustering the required two-thirds majority to remove him.

Sky News' Cordelia Lynch explains everything you need to know about impeachment in two minutes.

Those leading the impeachment process say such considerations are moot. If they see wrongdoing, they say, it is their duty to take action.

The reality is that the American public will deliver the ultimate verdict at the ballot box in November next year.

What they make of the evidence - and of the Trump presidency in general - will be decisive.

We live in a different media age from the era of previous televised impeachment hearings. It was estimated that 80% of Americans watched those concerning Richard Nixon over Watergate in 1973.

Image: Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott speak to reporters during the Senate Impeachment Trial of Bill Clinton in 1999

Twenty-one years ago it was Bill Clinton who survived a Senate impeachment trial.

Donald Trump probably will as well.

Whether he survives unscathed is a different matter.