8A -- The Michigan Daily - Thursday, December 10; 1998______________________________________ NATION/WORLD House judicial inquiry process moves swiftly to end- CLINTON Continued from Page 1A William Weld (R-Mass.) proposed that Clinton should pay a fine along with such a reprimand. "If you believe he acted in this fash- ion," Ruff told lawmakers grilling him about perjury charges, "you ought to censure him in whatever fashion seems most appropriate. But you cannot over- turn the will of the people, even if you find that there is clear and convincing evidence, which I do not think you can." The competing impeachment and censure proposals outlined yesterday signaled the beginning of the drama's final act in the House, as both sides laid their cards on the table and braced for a frenetic 10 days of maneuvering to win over the precious few centrists who hold Clinton's fate in their hands. In their search for defectors, Democrats have identified 26 "top tar- gets" and seven "additional targets" among Republicans with Clinton- friendly districts. But the key will be finding a way to force a floor vote on censure, according to strategists, because wavering Republicans reluc- tant to oust the president and yet unwill- ing to give him a free pass may feel compelled to vote for impeachment if they think it will be the only option pre- sented them. The Republican lawyers who drafted the proposed articles of impeachment adopted much of the language used when the Judiciary Committee voted to impeach Richard Nixon during Watergate. For example, Clinton, like Nixon before him, was charged with "using the powers and influence of the office of the President of the United States" in a way that violated "his consti- tutional oath faithfully to execute the office." However, the wording was changed in at least one significant way. The Nixon articles each concluded with a single sentence: "Wherefore, Richard Nixon, by such conduct, warrants impeachment and trial, and removal from office." Clinton, according to the Judiciary proposal, warrants all of those things as well as "disqualification to hold and enjoy any office of honor, trust or prof- it under the United States." The articles were tied together in a single eight-page resolution, but will be debated, amended and voted separately. Any articles that reach the House floor will be voted on individually as well but cannot be amended. While the language echoed Watergate, the substance of the charges was drawn almost entirely from Starr's 453-page report to Congress asserting that Clinton orchestrated a wide-rang- ing scheme to impede the Paula Jones sexual harassment lawsuit and the inde- pendent counsel's subsequent criminal investigation: Article I: Perjury in grand jury testi- mony. The resolution charged that Clinton lied under oath Aug. 17 about the nature of his relationship with Lewinsky and his "corrupt efforts t influence the testimony" by witness during the Jones suit. Article II: Perjury in the Jones case. Clinton, according to the resolution, lied both in sworn written answers to an inter- rogatory from her lawyers on Dec. 23, 1997, and again during a deposition on Jan. 17 about his interactions with Lewinsky. Article III: Obstruction of justice. Citing a series of actions in both the Jones suit and the Starr investigation, t resolution maintained Clinton "imped the administration of justice" by encour- aging Lewinsky to lie under oath, helping her find a job, coaching his secretary s possible testimony and helping to hide gifts that had been subpoenaed. Article IV: Abuse of power. Clinton, "using the attributes of office," lied to the American people about his affair with Lewinsky and "frivolously and corruptly asserted executive privileg the resolution asserted. In a new alleg tion, the resolution contended Clinton "exhibited contempt" for the impeach- ment inquiry by making false state- ments in response to the committee written questions. AP PHOTO President Clinton waves to the crowd as First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton sings after lighting the National Christmas Tree on the Ellipse in Washington, D.C. yesterday. Houste GOI's tt halt H nt anti-impeach mom tm The Washington Post WASHINGTON - House Republican leaders yesterday tried to counteract signs that the momentum to impeach President Clinton may be slowing among some of their mem- bers, as Democrats struggled to develop support for an acceptable censure resolution that could include an admission of guilt by the president and a hefty fine. Apparently fearing defections before there a vote next week on articles of impeachment, House Judiciary Committee Chairperson Henry Hyde (R-1ll.) sent a letter to the entire House, pleading with members not to make a pub- lic commitment on impeachment until his committee has completed its work., "I ask that you withhold judgment in this most impor- tant matter which may soon come before the full House," Hyde wrote. "I would be more than happy -to discuss this matter personally on the telephone with you if you so desire." Meanwhile the Christian Coalition finished delivering what executive director Randy Tate said were "hundreds of thousands" of pro-impeachment petitions to Capitol Hill, as the two sides mobilized for the final days of a historic battle over the future of Clinton's presidency. Only one more Republican publicly announced his opposition to impeachment yesterday. Rep. Amo Houghton (R-N.Y.) said he favored censuring the presi- dent, rather than impeaching him. His announcement brought to six the number of Republicans now on record against impeachment. But several other Republicans already appeared to be lean- ing in that direction. An aide to Rep. Constance Morella (R- Md.) suggested she was inching toward a position in support of censure as an alternative to impeachment - if Clinton cooperates. "The president still has time to become more forthright in his repentenance and offer up some form of contrition that might sway more members to support censure," said Bill Miller, Morella's chief of staff. White House officials and their Democratic allies on Capitol Hill were focused intensively on 30 or so Republicans, many from the Northeast, whom they regard as potential opponents of impeachment. The list was devolved during a Monday meeting between senior White House officials and aides to House Minority Leader Richard Gephardt (D-Mo.) The president's supporters have organized a targeted effort to reach moderate Republicans one-on-one, through friendly colleagues or pow- erful constituents who will make the case quietly against impeachment. In addition, House Minority Whip David Bonior (D- Mich.) has been deputized to keep defections among Democrats to a minimum, and senior Democratic aides on Capitol Hill said they believed the number would be no more than five or six. Clinton, advisers caught off guard after midterm elections* Los Angeles Times WASHINGTON - A funny thing happened on the presi- dent's way out of the Monica Lewinsky scandal. He got caught up in impeachment after all. Two weeks ago, the White House was confident that impeachment was all but dead because of the strong Democratic showing in the November midterm elec- tions. Now, the probability of impeachment is palpable at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. And the members of Clinton's team are scrambling to find enough votes from moderate Republicans to defeat impeachment resolutions expected to go to the House next week. The political magicians who have kept Clinton's scandal- plagued presidency afloat are not sure they can succeed this time and defeat the measure in the House. Many of the president's friends and some political observers expect Clinton to pull a rabbit out of his hat as he often has in the past. However, "There's a question of whether the rabbit will come out dead or alive," White House spokesperson Joe Lockhart said gloomily. In the weeks between the election and now, the president and many of his aides behaved, particularly in public, as though the impeachment process no longer existed. "The sense of urgency was lost and people were beguiled by the election returns into a kind of complacency," said a senior White House official. "What everyone underestimated was the relentless hatred of the president that motivates mo of the Republicans and how their defeat in the election serv to heighten their hatred." Others cited another factor in the surge in support for impeachment - the dismissive White House response to 81 written questions posed by the House Judiciary Committee about the Lewinsky affair, which inflamed some moderate Republicans. Even this week as the committee prepares to vote on arti- cles of impeachment, the president himself continued to prd- ject a relaxed, business-as-usual image. Yesterday, he talked with members of Congress from both parties about his plans for reforming Social Security, pinn a fourth star on Air Force Gen. Benjamin Davis and lit the national Christmas tree with first lady Hillary Clinton and home-run hitter Sammy Sosa. u~-~ I- "" @N-mq -aim-. 'L' ,