As evidence reportedly mounts in the Russia investigation (Picture: Getty Images)

It’s become increasingly likely that Donald Trump will be impeached, according to senior Washington officials.

Senator Mark Warner, the vice chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, reportedly told his friends in private that he put the odds at two to one against the President completing his full term.

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The Senate Intelligence Committee is currently in charge of investigating alleged Russian interference in the US election.

Warner’s spokesperson did not deny that he’d made the remarks, which were published in the New Yorker, but said the Senator was ‘not referring specifically to the Russia investigation, but rather the totality of challenges the President is currently facing’.


Senator Mark Warner, left, made the comments privately to friends (Picture: Reuters)

Since his election Trump has had the lowest approval rating of any new-elected president.

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‘You can’t govern this country with a 40% approval rate. You just can’t,’ Stephen Moore, a senior economist at the Heritage Foundation who advised Trump during the campaign, told The New Yorker.



‘Nobody in either party (Republicans or Democrats) is going to bend over backwards for Trump if over half the country doesn’t approve of him.’

This all comes as evidence reportedly mounts against the president, who has been accused of colluding with the Kremlin to secure the election.

(Picture: Getty Images)

One source involved in the investigation told The Guardian that ‘they now have specific, concrete and corroborative evidence of a collusion’ between the Trump campaign and Russia in the run up to the vote last November.

‘This is between people in the Trump campaign and agents of (Russian) influence relating to the use of hacked material,’ they said.

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Senator Warner himself has also previously claimed the Kremlin paid more than 1,000 people to generate negative fake news stories about Hillary Clinton during the presidential campaign.

And it was recently revealed that the British Government was given a dossier in December which detailed the alleged collusion between Trump and the Kremlin.

The White House maintains that it was unaware of any links to the Kremlin.