Today was Congress's first day back after a two-week recess, and the impeachment inquiry into President Trump is pressing forward.
Here are the key developments from today:
Former Vice President Joe Biden was just asked about his son's business ties to foreign countries.
The Bidens have been at the center of the House impeachment inquiry, which is focusing on President Trump's attempts to pressure Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky to investigate the former vice president during a July 25 phone call.
"If it's not OK for a president's family to be involved in foreign businesses, why was it okay for your son when you were vice president?" CNN's Anderson Cooper asked Biden moments ago.
He then shifted to the impeachment inquiry into Trump.
"What I think is important is we focus on why it's so important to remove this man from office," he said.
House Republicans left the George Kent deposition once again attacking Democrats over the process of the impeachment inquiry, accusing them of selectively leaking information from the depositions to suit their narratives.
Reps. Jim Jordan and Lee Zeldin specifically criticized Virginia Democratic Rep. Gerry Connolly for speaking to reporters about the deposition today (and holding up one of my tweets as evidence).
The Republican lawmakers needled Pelosi not holding a vote to formally authorize the impeachment inquiry, and argued they should be granted subpoena power.
Asked witnesses they would call, Zeldin noted he would like to speak to former Vice President Joe Biden, saying he agrees with the President that Hunter Biden’s arrangement with Burisa was troubling.
The CNN/New York Times Democratic debate just started in Ohio. The first question tonight was about impeachment. Each candidate had a different answer.
Two sources confirm to CNN that a grand jury subpoena was issued to former congressman Pete Sessions after the indictment of two associates of Rudy Giuliani was made public.
One source confirms that the subpoena pertains to matters connected to Giuliani, Lev Parnas and Igor Fruman and their dealings with Ukraine and efforts to remove to the US ambassador to Ukraine. The three were indicted along with others last week on conspiracy and campaign finance charges.
One source refused to rule out that Sessions himself is not a target of the grand jury investigation, saying instead that the investigation has "not reached definitive conclusions."
A spokesman for Sessions says the former congressman “is cooperating with the US Attorney from the Southern District of New York and will be providing documents to their office related to this matter over the next couple of weeks as requested.”
The spokesman, Matt Mackowiak, declined to specifically comment on reports that Sessions had received a grand jury subpoena for documents related to Giuliani’s Ukraine dealings and his communications with Giuliani, Parnas and Fruman.
CNN reported that prosecutors allege Fruman and Parnas asked Sessions, to help get the US ambassador to Ukraine fired at the same time that they were committing to raise tens of thousands of dollars for Sessions’ reelection campaign. Parnas made their request to the congressman in part at the behest of one or more Ukraine government officials, the indictment states.
A spokeswoman for the Manhattan US Attorney’s office declined to comment when asked about the subpoena.
The Department of Defense sent a letter today to House impeachment investigators in response to a subpoena for documents, saying, “The Department is unable to comply with your request for documents at this time.”
Robert Hood, assistant secretary of Defense for Legislative Affairs, sent the letter to the three committee chairs — Adam Schiff, Eliot Engel and Elijah Cummings — saying, “The Department understands the significance of your request for information and has taken steps to identify, preserve, and collect potentially responsive documents.”
But, he went on to write, “The current subpoena, however, raises a number of legal and practical concerns that must first be addressed.”
Hood argued that “none of your committees has identified any House rule or House resolution that authorized the committees to begin an inquiry pursuant to impeachment power.”
“Even if the inquiry were validly authorized, much of the information sought in the subpoena appears to consist of confidential Executive Branch communications that are potentially protected by executive privilege and would require careful review to ensure that no such information is improperly disclosed," he said.
Hood wrote that it’s “not feasible within the mere eight days afforded to the Department to comply with the subpoena.”
House Intelligence Chair Adam Schiff, talking about the State Department's missed deadline to turn over documents in the impeachment inquiry, said Democrats are running into "a complete effort by the administration to stonewall."
“Today is long past due the date when the State Department was subpoenaed to provide documents," Schiff said. "The State Department has requested of those that we have contacted that instead of giving the documents to us that they give the documents to the State Department. Under the expectation, I think these witnesses have, the State Department would turn them over to Congress."
"And were it not for the fact that at least some witnesses have given us documents, we would not know that there is a paper record of efforts to condition this meeting and perhaps condition military support itself on these political investigations," he added.
House Intelligence Committee Chair Adam Schiff says Democrats have made “dramatic progress in answering some of the questions” surrounding Trump’s July 25 call with Ukraine's Zelensky after continuing the impeachment inquiry over the recess.
He said Democrats are “learning a great deal on the issue of conditionality,” for the meeting Zelensky wanted to have with Trump. Schiff says Zelensky’s desire to have a good relationship with the United States “gave enormous leverage to President Trump to coerce what he wanted from the President of Ukraine."
Schiff says there is a paper record of efforts to condition this meeting, and that there are additional documents that State Department has that have not been given to Congress.
He reiterated his argument that the private depositions helps prevent witnesses from shaping their testimony around others’ accounts of events.
House Minority Whip Steve Scalise emerged after the GOP impeachment meeting complaining about House Intel Chairman Adam Schiff’s unfair “witch hunt.”
Scalise said Democrats should release the testimony.
“The public should see all of this," he said.