Impeachment: Updates from The Washington Post

The Washington Post

Subscribe to follow The Washington Post’s coverage of impeachment proceedings with this collection of episodes from across The Post’s audio programming, including "Post Reports," "Can He Do That?" and "The Daily 202's Big Idea."

  • 12 minutes 58 seconds
    ‘Unshackled and unleashed’: Trump, post-acquittal
    On Friday's "Post Reports," White House bureau chief Phil Rucker speaks with guest host Caroline Kitchener about how Trump's acquittal has emboldened him and what it means for the presidency at large.
    7 February 2020, 9:00 pm
  • 4 minutes 17 seconds
    President Trump is determined to make an example out of Alexander Vindman
    From "The Daily 202" podcast: Alexander Vindman, the National Security Council aide who testified during the House impeachment hearings, will be informed by a political appointee at the White House in the coming days that he is being pushed out.
    7 February 2020, 12:48 pm
  • 5 minutes 5 seconds
    How Mitt Romney decided to vote for convicting Trump for abuse of power
    From "The Daily 202" podcast: Mitt Romney sealed a place in history yesterday by voting to convict President Trump of abuse of power, becoming a lone voice of dissent in the Republican Party.
    6 February 2020, 12:56 pm
  • 22 minutes 19 seconds
    A president acquitted. The balance of power tested.
    The Senate has said yes, the president can do that, regarding his conduct in Ukraine. So what does Trump’s acquittal mean for the powers of the presidency? On “Can He Do That?” editor Marc Fisher talks about the future of our country’s balance of power.
    5 February 2020, 10:38 pm
  • 5 minutes 4 seconds
    President Trump acquitted
    President Trump will remain in office after the Senate votes to acquit. On Post Reports, Congressional reporter Mike DeBonis walks us through Sen. Mitt Romney's surprise vote, and why it didn't make a difference in the end.
    5 February 2020, 10:35 pm
  • 4 minutes 22 seconds
    Joe Manchin's proposal to censure President Trump meets resistance on both sides
    In a floor speech, Sen. Joe Manchin declined to announce his decision, but asked his colleagues to consider censuring Trump, a less severe rebuke than removal from office that few senators were willing to pursue.
    4 February 2020, 12:39 pm
  • 3 minutes 48 seconds
    Can a president be impeached twice?
    On Post Reports, Dan Balz explains whether a president can be impeached more than once.
    3 February 2020, 9:45 pm
  • 3 minutes 3 seconds
    Susan Collins finds herself lonely in the middle, as a vote on impeachment looms
    From "The Daily 202" podcast: Sen. Susan Collins was the first of two Republicans to break with the president on any aspect of the impeachment trial by voting for witnesses, and she’s getting attacked for it from her right back home in Maine.
    3 February 2020, 1:16 pm
  • 9 minutes 32 seconds
    Witnesses voted down in Senate impeachment trial
    On tonight's Post Reports, Aaron Blake explains how Republicans kept witnesses out of the impeachment trial.
    1 February 2020, 1:50 am
  • 4 minutes 30 seconds
    Senate appears ready to reject witnesses in Trump impeachment trial
    From “The Daily 202” podcast: The impeachment trial of President Trump is headed for a critical vote Friday that will determine whether the Senate hears from witnesses.
    31 January 2020, 1:18 pm
  • 10 minutes 16 seconds
    A joke from Adam Schiff, and that moment with Rand Paul
    On tonight's Post Reports, Amber Phillips tells us what happened on the last day for questions during the Senate impeachment trial.
    31 January 2020, 1:41 am
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