Testimony by the top U.S. envoy to Ukraine, Bill Taylor, appears to contradict the White House's claims that there was no quid pro quo on Ukraine. And President Trump announced he's lifting sanctions on Turkey. CBS News White House correspondent Ben Tracy, national security correspondent David Martin, and The Hill's Bob Cusack joined CBSN to break down the day's news in Washington.
Following President Trump’s orders for Republicans to get tougher on impeachment, a group of Republicans barged into a closed-door hearing. Nancy Cordes reports.
President Trump is leaning on fellow Republicans to push back against impeachment, and his allies in Congress seem to be listening. Dozens of members delayed a hearing Wednesday, storming into a high-security room where another official was due to answer questions about the White House lobbying effort in Ukraine. Nancy Cordes reports.
Senate Republicans, led by Lindsey Graham, entered the impeachment fight. He introduced a resolution condemning the House for a lack of transparency in the impeachment inquiry. Nancy Cordes reports.
CBS News has learned former National Security Adviser John Bolton is consulting with lawmakers about possibly cooperating with the impeachment inquiry. President Trump fired Bolton last month. Paula Reid reports.
House committees investigating President Trump issued three more subpoenas Friday for administration officials to testify, as the president continued to defend himself, telling reporters that "I did nothing wrong." Ben Tracy reports.
State department official Phillip Reeker became the 10th person to testify in the impeachment inquiry with Saturday's closed-door testimony. Reeker was expected to be asked about President Trump's dealings with Ukraine and how the State Department responded. Ben Tracy reports.
The former South Carolina congressman discussed the Republican Party's outrage over Democrats' use of private testimony as part of their impeachment inquiry, and the potential for him to join the president's legal team.
Later this week, the House will take its first vote on the impeachment inquiry against President Trump. The White House has used the lack of a formal vote to avoid cooperating with the probe. Nancy Cordes reports.
House Democrats are getting ready to hold the first floor vote about impeachment since launching the inquiry. CBS News White House correspondent Ben Tracy, New York TImes chief Washington correspondent Carl Hulse, and Politico foreign affairs correspondent Nahal Toosi join "Red and Blue" to discuss where the investigation is heading.