'Playing Politics' podcast: Impeachment hearings set: What will Americans listen for?

The public phase of the inquiry begins next week. Hear the "Playing Politics" analysis from WCCO Radio's Chad Hartman and the Star Tribune Editorial Board's John Rash and D.J. Tice.

November 7, 2019 at 12:09AM
The Capitol building in Washington, Oct. 31, 2019. The whistleblower who touched off an impeachment inquiry with his explosive complaint about President TrumpÕs effort to pressure Ukraine to investigate his political rivals is willing to answer House RepublicansÕ written questions, his legal team said on Sunday.
The Capitol building in Washington, Oct. 31, 2019. The whistleblower who touched off an impeachment inquiry with his explosive complaint about President TrumpÕs effort to pressure Ukraine to investigate his political rivals is willing to answer House RepublicansÕ written questions, his legal team said on Sunday. (New York Times/The Minnesota Star Tribune)
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Alex Kormann/The Minnesota Star Tribune

Instructors taught us that the facts on the left side of the equation — the person with a gun, the escaping felon in a car, the person running into a home or away from the agents — did not always equate to an authorized use.

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