One of the key witnesses from the Congressional Democrats’ 2019 impeachment of then-President Donald Trump over frozen Ukraine aid has now registered as a foreign agent on behalf of the Eastern European country. Gordon Sondland, who served as the United States Ambassador to the European Union from 2018 until 2020, says he registered his activities with the Biden government out of an abundance of caution.
According to Sondland, he isn’t receiving any compensation for his current lobbying on behalf of aid for Ukraine, which he is doing purely on a volunteer basis. Addressing his current activities, Sondland told POLITICO: “I’m trying to win the hearts and minds of those who aren’t quite there yet.”
STAR DEMOCRAT IMPEACHMENT WITNESS.
Sondland’s testimony during the 2019 impeachment probe suggested that he believed the former President withheld aid as part of a quid pro quo scheme to force Ukraine to investigate allegations of corruption committed by individuals in the country with ties to Joe and Hunter Biden. The quid pro quo accusation became critical to the Democrat impeachment proceedings.
“Was there a ‘quid pro quo?” Sondland said in his opening remarks during a 2019 impeachment hearing. “The answer is yes.” He went on to make an outlandish claim that top officials across the Trump administration were aware of the quid pro quo scheme, stating, “Everyone was in the loop. It was no secret.”
Despite the fantastical allegations leveled by Sondland, he could not provide material evidence of the supposed deal. The Republican impeachment counsel Steve Castor described the ambassador as a “trifecta of unreliability” after Sondland admitted he had never heard Trump describe any preconditions for Ukraine to receive military aid directly. The former ambassador was removed from his post just days after the U.S. Senate voted to acquit Trump of the partisan charges brought by House Democrats.