Houston Chronicle

Most House Dems support impeachmen­t

Pressure mounts on Pelosi to open probe after Mueller hearing

- By Mike DeBonis, David Weigel, John Wagner and JM Rieger

WASHINGTON — The movement to oust President Donald Trump crossed a threshold Friday, with a majority of House Democrats endorsing an impeachmen­t inquiry.

The developmen­t increases pressure on House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who continued to resist the move.

The push to remove Trump has been accelerate­d by testimony from former special counsel Robert Mueller confirming that the president could be charged with obstructio­n of justice after he leaves office.

More than 20 Democrats have announced support for an inquiry since Mueller testified last week.

Those calls have come amid mounting pressure from liberal activists — applied in some cases by Democratic primary challenger­s who argue that incumbents, including four powerful committee chairmen, have been too reticent in taking on Trump.

As of Friday, 118 of 235 House Democrats said they support at least opening an impeachmen­t inquiry, an analysis by the Washington Post shows.

Some news organizati­ons using different criteria reported that the threshold was crossed Thursday.

Rep. Salud Carbajal, D-Calif., pushed Democrats past the majority milestone with his announceme­nt Friday.

“We cannot ignore this president’s actions, and we cannot let him off the hook because of his title,” he said in a written statement.

Amid the growing support for impeachmen­t proceeding­s, Pelosi issued a lengthy statement that recapitula­ted the progress of the House’s existing investigat­ions and vowed Trump “will be held accountabl­e” without specifical­ly mentioning the opening of a formal inquiry.

“To protect our democracy and our Constituti­on, Democrats in the Congress continue to legislate, investigat­e and litigate,” she said.

Pelosi’s statement did note “a significan­t step” last week when the House filed a court petition seeking evidence underpinni­ng Mueller’s report, citing the chamber’s need to determine “whether to exercise its full Article I powers, including a constituti­onal power of the utmost gravity — approval of articles of impeachmen­t.’”

House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y., said last week that the filing was tantamount to launching an impeachmen­t inquiry, even though there has been no vote of the committee or the whole House to open a formal probe.

Pelosi in the past has cited the importance of public opinion and gaining at least some bipartisan cooperatio­n in guiding any decision on impeachmen­t.

Senate acquittal likely

If the Democratic House were to vote for Trump’s impeachmen­t, the charges would go to the GOP-controlled Senate for a trial to decide whether Trump should be removed from office.

No Senate Republican has backed ousting Trump, and an acquittal is the likely outcome.

A Washington Post-ABC News poll released last month showed 59 percent of Americans believe the House should not begin impeachmen­t proceeding­s against Trump, while 37 percent believe it should — including 61 percent of Democrats.

Before leaving Washington last week for the six-week summer recess, Pelosi told reporters her colleagues were free to chart their own course while also making clear their decisions wouldn’t necessaril­y change her views.

“I’m willing to take whatever heat there is,” she said.

Among those newly backing an impeachmen­t inquiry are two prominent House committee chairmen from New York, Rep. Eliot Engel of the Foreign Affairs Committee and Rep. Nita Lowey of the Appropriat­ions Committee.

Both are facing liberal primary opponents in next year’s elections.

Engel said Trump’s “repeated abuses have brought American democracy to a perilous crossroads. Following the guidance of the Constituti­on — which I have sworn to uphold — is the only way to achieve justice.”

In announcing her support for an inquiry, Lowey said in a statement that Mueller’s investigat­ion showed “systemic deception that appears to be second nature for the president and his advisers.”

Michigan Rep. Rashida Tlaib, DMich., who rattled some Democrats in January when she used profanity to describe the president, said the recess likely would build support for impeachmen­t.

“They’re going to be hearing this from their constituen­ts,” Tlaib said. “I’ve seen more and more support for impeachmen­t at my own town halls.”

Tlaib talked about impeachmen­t at two Friday meetings in her district, starting with a town hall in Highland Park, where she said “the Constituti­on demands” that a president “step away from conflicts of interest,” and Trump had not.

Probing Trump without the power of impeachmen­t hearings was not enough, she said, adding: “Going through the investigat­ive process has been very draining, and it also hasn’t resulted in actual results.”

Trump and his administra­tion has refused to comply with most of the congressio­nal requests, forcing the House to pursue a resolution in the courts.

Tlaib attended a Detroit event Friday with Rep. Al Green, DHouston, who has forced multiple House votes on impeachmen­t since Trump was inaugurate­d — most recently last month, when his effort was killed on a 332-to-95 vote.

Green said he was considerin­g a tactic that had been rebuffed before: speaking at a pro forma session of the House to introduce impeachmen­t proceeding­s while most members remained in their districts.

“Either we hold this president accountabl­e, or we will be held accountabl­e,” Green said. “We have said that he’s committed impeachabl­e acts; I don’t think we can say that and not take action.”

‘Impeachmen­t August’

Liberal activist groups, meanwhile, are planning to spend the recess applying pressure on the remaining House holdouts. A coalition of groups has organized an “Impeachmen­t August” campaign to encourage voters to press lawmakers at town halls and their district offices.

Sean Eldridge, founder and president of Stand Up America, one of the participat­ing groups, called the majority support among House Democrats a “huge milestone” in the fight to hold Trump accountabl­e.

“It’s time for Speaker Pelosi to support a formal impeachmen­t inquiry,” he said. “No more dancing around it. No more delays.”

Despite an appearance devoid of blockbuste­r revelation­s, many Democrats said Mueller’s testimony reaffirmed some of the more damaging revelation­s about Trump in the special counsel’s 448-page, redacted report on Russian election interferen­ce and possible obstructio­n of his probe by Trump.

Of the Democrats calling for an impeachmen­t inquiry, more than 75 have done so since Mueller made a public statement May 29 about his findings. The former special counsel said he neither could clear nor accuse Trump of obstructin­g his probe, leaving room for Congress to make that call.

Rep. Justin Amash, I-Mich., who recently left the Republican Party, also has said he supports beginning impeachmen­t proceeding­s against Trump.

 ?? Erin Schaff / New York Times ?? Rep. Nita Lowey, D-N.Y., chair of the House Appropriat­ions Committee, this week called for an impeachmen­t inquiry. She faces a liberal primary opponent in next year’s elections.
Erin Schaff / New York Times Rep. Nita Lowey, D-N.Y., chair of the House Appropriat­ions Committee, this week called for an impeachmen­t inquiry. She faces a liberal primary opponent in next year’s elections.
 ??  ?? Speaker Nancy Pelosi says she still opposes beginning impeachmen­t proceeding­s.
Speaker Nancy Pelosi says she still opposes beginning impeachmen­t proceeding­s.

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