The former US ambassador to Ukraine — whom President Trump called “bad news” in a call with that country’s leader — arrived on Capitol Hill to testify Friday in the House impeachment inquiry.

Marie Yovanovitch, whom Trump canned in May, was expected to give a deposition behind closed doors to House investigators probing Trump, and had no comment as she entered the Capitol.

Before her arrival, Democratic lawmakers leading the inquiry were unsure whether she would show up after the White House said earlier in the week it would refuse to cooperate with an inquiry that the president and his GOP supporters have termed “a kangaroo court.”

A career diplomat who also has served as ambassador to two other countries, Yovanovitch’s stint as ambassador in Kiev was cut short when she was recalled to Washington as Trump allies leveled unsubstantiated charges of disloyalty against her.

According to media reports, Trump took the action after complaints by his personal lawyer Rudy Giuliani and others that she had obstructed Giuliani’s efforts to persuade Ukraine to investigate Joe Biden and his son Hunter Biden.

Democrats have called her removal politically motivated.

Gordon Sondland, the US ambassador to the European Union, will also comply with a House subpoena and testify next Thursday before the committees leading the impeachment inquiry, his lawyers said Friday.

On Thursday, two foreign-born Florida businessmen who had helped Giuliani investigate Biden were arrested in what prosecutors said was a scheme to illegally funnel money to a pro-Trump election committee and other US political candidates.

The pair, Ukraine-born Lev Parnas and Belarus-born Igor Fruman, were arrested at an airport outside Washington carrying one-way tickets to Vienna.

Prosecutors said the pair conspired to contribute foreign money, including at least $1 million from an unidentified Russian businessman, to candidates for federal and state offices to buy influence.

The testimony from Yovanovitch is the first of several depositions of key figures planned by the House committees spearheading the probe.

Yovanovitch became the target in March of allegations — vehemently denied by the State Department — that she gave a Ukrainian prosecutor a list of people not to prosecute.

Trump allies called for her removal, accusing her of criticizing the president to foreign officials, something current and former colleagues found inconceivable.

According to a White House summary, Trump described her as “bad news” to Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky in the July call in which he sought the Ukrainian leader’s help to investigate the Bidens. “She’s going to go through some things,” Trump added.

One of the Soviet-born businessmen arrested Thursday, Parnas, sought the help of then-Republican Rep. Pete Sessions of Texas to get Trump to remove Yovanovitch, according to the indictment.