Freshman U.S. Rep. Angie Craig, a Democrat representing a swing district in the southern Twin Cities suburbs, said Sunday she will vote to impeach President Donald Trump.
"After reviewing the public testimony from nonpartisan public servants and officials appointed to their roles by the president himself — as well as the final House Intelligence Committee report — I have decided that this week I will vote yes on both articles of impeachment," Craig wrote in an open letter to her constituents that she posted online. "No elected leader is above the law."
Craig, whose district voted for Trump in 2016, had been among a small number of Democrats who had yet to declare their intentions ahead of full votes by the House on two articles of impeachment that appear certain to go against the president.
One alleges abuse of power and the other obstruction of Congress against the Republican president in connection with allegations that he leveraged $391 million in foreign aid to Ukraine in exchange for that country announcing an investigation into potential 2020 rival Joe Biden. If the House impeaches Trump, as is expected, the effort moves to the GOP-controlled U.S. Senate, where conviction and ouster appear doubtful.
Another Minnesota Democrat, veteran Rep. Collin Peterson, who faces a tough re-election fight in a heavily pro-Trump district if he runs again, indicated over the weekend to the Worthington (Minn.) Globe that he doesn't expect to vote for impeachment, barring any new revelations in the coming days.
Craig wrote that this is a "somber time" for the country: "It's a vote that no member should ever want to take, and I certainly did not."
She said she has concluded that "it is clear from the testimony and the report delivered to Congress that the President attempted to coerce a foreign government into investigating his political rival by withholding congressionally appropriated military assistance to a foreign ally."
Craig went on to call Trump's actions "a clear abuse of power by a sitting U.S. President for his own personal gain. It is also clear that the President obstructed Congress by refusing to produce documents and blocking testimony during the impeachment inquiry, which is against the law."