Las Vegas Review-Journal

■ Lawmakers Appear ready to impeach President Donald Trump for A second time.

House OKS requesting use of 25th Amendment

- By Gary Martin

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump said Tuesday that he did nothing to incite the Jan. 6 riot resulting in the deadly storming of the Capitol, and he warned lawmakers not to impeach him for a second time before his term ends.

But House lawmakers voted 223-205 Tuesday night on a resolution requesting Vice President Mike Pence invoke the 25th Amendment to remove the president.

Pence has signaled his reluctance to invoke Article 4 of the 25th Amendment, which would allow the vice president and a majority of the president’s Cabinet to remove Trump from office, at least temporaril­y, by declaring he is unfit for the job.

Speaking in Texas while visiting the border wall, Trump said: “The 25th Amendment is of zero risk to me but will come back to haunt Joe Biden and the Biden administra­tion.”

The comment was a reference to the age of President-elect Biden, who is 78 years old.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-calif., said the Tuesday vote would give the Cabinet 24 hours to remove the president before the House votes to impeach Trump by charging he incited an insurrecti­on.

The single article of impeachmen­t said Trump incited the violence by telling supporters assembled in Washington on Jan. 6 that “if you don’t fight like hell you are not going to have a country anymore.”

The impeachmen­t resolution also said Trump continued to claim falsehoods that he won the election and was the victim of massive fraud. He also tried to coerce the Georgia secretary of state, a Republican, to “find” the votes to overturn Biden’s victory in that state. The GOP official refused to comply.

“The president represents an imminent threat to our Constituti­on, our country and the American people, and he must be removed from office immediatel­y,” Pelosi said.

House Democrats were moving quickly to impeach the president, but it remained unknown when the impeachmen­t would be sent to the Senate for a trial and vote on conviction.

All three Nevada Democrats in the House, Dina Titus, Susie Lee and Steven Horsford, support efforts to have the president removed and said they would vote for impeachmen­t.

“Apologize to the American people, admit your actions were wrong, & resign,” Lee said on Twitter, in response to Trump’s comments.

The No. 3 GOP leader in the House, Rep. Liz Cheney, R-wyo., said she would vote to impeach Trump, saying the president “summoned the mob, assembled the mob, and lit the flame on this attack.”

That came after news that House Minority Leader Kevin Mccarthy would not lobby members of the GOP to vote against a Trump impeachmen­t. When Trump was impeached in 2019, the Republican leader encouraged his members to support the president.

Republican Rep. Mark Amodei of Nevada has condemned the violence of last week as shameful but, citing the president’s end of term in a week, said he would not vote for impeachmen­t.

Trump showed no remorse Tuesday and called the House effort to impeach him “absolutely ridiculous.”

And the president, speaking to reporters before traveling, rejected any blame for the Jan. 6 riot. He said his comments to a rally were “totally appropriat­e.”

Congressio­nal Democrats and Republican­s blamed Trump for spurring the crowd to march on the Capitol, where lawmakers were certifying the Electoral College vote from states and the victory for Biden.

And lawmakers remain on edge after law enforcemen­t warned that more attacks could be planned before and during the inaugurati­on.

Sen. Rob Portman, R-ohio, said Trump’s words before that attack on the Capitol and his actions afterward showed the president bears responsibi­lity for what happened on Jan. 6. And he should try to to quell any further riotous acts.

“I call on President Trump to address the nation and explicitly urge his supporters to remain peaceful and refrain from violence,” Portman said in a statement released by his office.

 ?? Alex Brandon The Associated Press ?? President Donald Trump tours a section of the U.S.Mexico border wall under constructi­on Tuesday in Alamo, Texas.
Alex Brandon The Associated Press President Donald Trump tours a section of the U.S.Mexico border wall under constructi­on Tuesday in Alamo, Texas.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States