allies through the process. one thing that s interesting is the president s approach is if you cross my line, vladimir putin, then we ll punish you and punish you swiftly and severely. congress has been a huge debate. should we have some sanctions you. they haven t been able to reach consensus. that negotiation really broke down this week because democrats made an offer to republicans on monday. on wednesday you had republicans unveiling their own legislation that was republican-backed only. i think that is a tell-tale sign those talks have ended on capitol hill. and at this point if there is a russian invasion, that whole debate over whether or not sanctions should come before or after an invasion or which sanctions should come before or after an invasion, that debate ends. and at the end of the day, democrats and republicans have to come together, where the president will have to make an executive decision if lawmakers aren t in washington next week to swiftly enact sanctions and y
that is 52% of the house democratic caucus. lawmakers aren t in washington right you in. they are back home in their congressional districts where support for impeachment may not be as popular especially in districts that went for president trump in the last election. man you raju went to one such area to take the political temperature. reporter: to a growing number of house democrats there s no question that president trump must be impeached for breaking the law. in the republican leaning suburbs of detroit, a major battleground in the 2020 presidential race and for control of the house the question is much more complicated. i have mixed reviews from people in my district. congresswoman haley stephens, a freshman democrat is navigating a fine line in this district that s been dominated by the gop in over a decade. she s projected an image of a bipartisan pragmatist. i m not going to let you down. pushing on issues like education reform, manufacturing