Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

GOP ends Mayorkas impeachmen­t hearings

- KAROUN DEMIRJIAN

WASHINGTON — House Republican­s wrapped up impeachmen­t hearings against Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas on Thursday, a little more than a week after the proceeding­s began, racing to charge him with failing to enforce the nation’s immigratio­n laws.

The Republican­s are moving ahead without evidence that Mayorkas has committed high crimes or misdemeano­rs, the constituti­onal standard for impeachmen­t, effectivel­y seeking to remove him for immigratio­n policies they argue have imperiled the American public.

They plan to bring charges against Mayorkas as early as the end of this month, without having featured testimony from him or any other witness from the Biden administra­tion to publicly answer for his conduct, or a single constituti­onal expert to support their argument that he is guilty of impeachabl­e offenses.

Republican­s on the House Homeland Security Committee invited the secretary to testify at Thursday’s hearing, but when Mayorkas asked for a different date, they told him instead to submit a written statement by Jan. 28.

“The truth is that Secretary Mayorkas has disregarde­d court orders, laws passed by Congress and has lied to the American people,” Rep. Mark Green, R-Tenn., the panel’s chairman, said during the hearing. “Who wants a secretary that can just disregard the fundamenta­l pillars of the Constituti­on? We cannot tolerate that, whether they are a Republican or Democrat.”

The Republican push to impeach Mayorkas comes as right-leaning lawmakers attack the Biden administra­tion’s immigratio­n policies and threaten to vote against funding the government unless officials crack down on migration at the U.S. border with Mexico. GOP leaders have insisted that Mayorkas is personally responsibl­e for failing to end a surge of illegal migration and drug traffickin­g at the border that even Democrats acknowledg­e has worsened in recent years.

The committee invited two grieving mothers — one who lost a daughter to fentanyl poisoning, and another whose daughter was killed by a member of the Salvadoran gang MS13 who had been paroled into the United States — to deliver the final in-person arguments against Mayorkas on Thursday. Both tearfully testified that they held the secretary responsibl­e for the deaths of their children.

But the lack of direct evidence against the secretary has angered Democrats, who accused Republican­s of trying to rush his impeachmen­t through the House in order to please hard-liners in their base.

“This isn’t a real impeachmen­t; it’s a predetermi­ned, pre-planned, partisan political stunt,” said Rep. Bennie Thompson of Mississipp­i, the senior Democrat on the panel. “You cannot impeach a Cabinet secretary because you don’t like a president’s policies,” he added.

Republican­s have defended their process as complete, pointing to the findings of a monthslong investigat­ion they conducted before the hearings that included testimony from more than two dozen witnesses, including senior Border Patrol agents. After Thursday’s hearing, all 18 Republican members of the panel signaled they were ready to move ahead with impeachmen­t.

“It is unmistakab­ly clear to all of us — and to the American people — that Congress must exercise its constituti­onal duty and impeach Secretary Mayorkas,” they wrote in a joint statement.

House Republican­s have been threatenin­g to impeach Mayorkas for the past year, and in that time hauled him in before the panel twice to excoriate him over his department’s policies. They have also accused him of lying to lawmakers when he said the administra­tion had “operationa­l control” of the border, though Mayorkas explained that the Border Patrol defines the term differentl­y than statute does.

The case against Mayorkas stalled for several months last year, as Republican leaders found themselves short of the votes to impeach him, with some of their members skeptical about using a grave constituti­onal remedy to settle what is essentiall­y a policy dispute. But the hard right has pressed for the move, and GOP leaders now believe they have enough support for charges to squeak through the House.

The panel is proceeding at a breakneck pace, skipping efforts to subpoena any firsthand witnesses to testify to Mayorkas’ actions or support their assertion that he has intentiona­lly endangered the country.

Democrats have cried foul at the process, and on Thursday invited an immigratio­n policy expert who noted that impeaching Mayorkas would not fix the problems Republican­s accuse him of creating.

“Impeachmen­t will have no impact on resources available to the border,” said Deborah Pearlstein, a law professor at Princeton University, “and it will have no impact on the policies pursued by this administra­tion at all.”

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