Los Angeles Times

Pelosi: House plans to charge Trump

The speaker gives Pence and Cabinet 24 hours to invoke the 25th Amendment to remove the president.

- By Laura King

WASHINGTON — Citing President Trump’s “assault on our democracy,” Speaker Nancy Pelosi said Sunday for the f irst time that the House would move to impeach him in the wake of last week’s ransacking of the U. S. Capitol, unless Vice President Mike Pence and the Cabinet agree to remove him under the 25th Amendment.

Pelosi’s plan, disclosed in a letter to colleagues, came as a second Republican senator called on Trump to resign over his incitement of the mob that attacked the seat of Congress on Wednesday, marking an intensifyi­ng push by lawmakers to force Trump from power before his term ends at noon on Jan. 20.

“We are calling on the vice president to respond within 24 hours,” Pelosi wrote. “Next, we will proceed with bringing impeachmen­t legislatio­n to the f loor. In protecting our Constituti­on and our democracy, we will act with urgency, because this president represents an imminent threat to both.”

With administra­tion officials showing little appetite to remove Trump by invoking the 25th Amendment — and more than 210 Democrats already signed on to proposed articles of impeachmen­t — Trump appears more likely to be impeached by the House for the second time, potentiall­y making him the first U. S. president to hold that unwelcome distinctio­n. He was impeached for pressuring Ukrainian government officials to investigat­e thenpresid­ential rival Joe Biden

but later acquitted by the Senate.

Pelosi’s letter provided no timetable for an impeachmen­t vote. Articles of impeachmen­t are expected to be introduced in the House on Monday, with a vote possible as early as Wednesday. That would make it one of the fastest presidenti­al impeachmen­ts ever conducted.

The speaker last week had called on Pence to invoke the 25th Amendment — which sets out the procedure for removing an unfit president — and raised the prospect of impeachmen­t, but the new deadline for action aims to force the vice president’s hand.

Earlier Sunday, Republican Sen. Patrick J. Toomey of Pennsylvan­ia told NBC’s “Meet the Press” that the president should “resign and go away as soon as possible.” He became the second GOP senator, after Sen. Lisa Murkowski ( R- Alaska), to tell the president that it was time to go.

But although Toomey agreed that the president’s actions were impeachabl­e, he demurred when asked whether he would vote to convict Trump in the Senate.

“I don’t know, as a practical matter, that it is actually even possible to do an impeachmen­t in the number, in the handful, of days that are left,” the senator said on CNN.

With Trump’s term ending in just 10 days, Toomey and several other Republican­s argued that if the House impeached the president, a Senate trial would not occur until after Trump had already left office and was a private citizen. Outgoing Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell ( R- Ky.) has said all 100 senators would have to consent to fast- tracking a trial or any business of substance before Inaugurati­on Day, an unlikely prospect.

Democrats say impeachmen­t is still vital because it signals that Trump’s behavior is deeply unacceptab­le, and could also result in barring him from running for off ice again, as he has hinted he might.

Before voting on impeachmen­t, Pelosi said that the House would try on Monday to pass by unanimous consent a resolution calling for administra­tion officials to invoke the 25th Amendment. It is unlikely that measure will pass, so Pelosi said she would then bring the resolution to a vote Tuesday.

Rep. Ted Lieu ( D- Torrance) said the resolution votes provide Trump and the GOP with a chance to avoid another impeachmen­t drama. “This sequencing by @ SpeakerPel­osi is correct,” he tweeted. “Impeachmen­t is one of the gravest powers of Congress. It should always be our last option. If @ POTUS doesn’t resign or if @ VP doesn’t invoke the 25th Amendment, then we will Impeach.”

In response to concerns that pursuing impeachmen­t would distract the new Congress and the nation from coping with the pandemic and supporting Presidente­lect Biden’s agenda, House Majority Whip James E. Clyburn of South Carolina raised the possibilit­y of delaying the Senate trial for up to several months.

He said even that if the House impeached Trump this week, Pelosi ( D- San Francisco) could refrain from immediatel­y sending the articles of impeachmen­t to the Senate for trial. That would allow Biden to deal with crucial early business, such as securing confirmati­on for key Cabinet nominees and taking steps to rein in the coronaviru­s that is killing Americans at a record pace.

Last week, the number of daily deaths from COVID- 19 reached 4,000 for the f irst time, pushing the national toll to nearly 375,000.

“Let’s give Presidente­lect Biden the 100 days he needs to get his agenda off and running,” Clyburn said on CNN’s “State of the Union.”

Four days after the Capitol was broken into and ransacked, many lawmakers still seemed to struggle for words to describe an event unpreceden­ted in modern American history. The violence — which left f ive dead, including a Capitol Police officer — forced lawmakers to f lee and temporaril­y delayed their formal counting and announceme­nt of electoral votes in Biden’s victory, as required by the Constituti­on.

With redoubled focus on securing Biden’s inaugurati­on, senior Democrats called on law enforcemen­t to address the continuing threat posed by Trump partisans.

Incoming Senate Majority Leader Charles E. Schumer ( D- N. Y.) said Sunday that he had urged FBI Director Christophe­r Wray a day earlier to “relentless­ly pursue” the Capitol attackers, about 100 of whom have been arrested and charged.

Sen. Chris Coons ( DDel.), appearing on CBS’ “Face the Nation,” urged authoritie­s to “f lood the zone around the Capitol with federal resources” for Biden’s inaugurati­on on Jan. 20.

Although the president has yet to publicly express any remorse over Wednesday’s mob attack, his most ardent defenders, including Rep. Devin Nunes ( R- Tulare), pivoted swiftly to grievances over the permanent terminatio­n of Trump’s personal account on Twitter, his favorite social media platform.

“Republican­s have no way to communicat­e,” Nunes complained on a nationally televised cable program, Fox’s “Sunday Morning Futures.”

Sen. Roy Blunt ( R- Mo.) suggested — as some other senators did after Trump’s f irst impeachmen­t last year — that the president had learned his lesson.

“My personal view is that the president touched the hot stove on Wednesday and is unlikely to touch it again,” said Blunt, interviewe­d on “Face the Nation.” He said Trump should serve out the remainder of his term.

Democrats disagreed. Rep. Hakeem Jeffries ( DN. Y.), the chair of the Democratic Caucus, said Trump’s remaining days in power represente­d peril for the country.

“Every second, every minute, every hour that Donald Trump remains in office presents a danger to the American people,” Jeffries said on “Meet the Press.” Trump, he said, “may be in the Twitter penalty box, but he still has access to the nuclear codes.”

Many Democrats have characteri­zed the Capitol attack as a logical culminatio­n of Trump’s years of hateful rhetoric, demonizing opponents and underminin­g democratic principles. But although some longtime Trump loyalists broke with him over the violent episode, many insisted at the same time that it was a departure from the overall trajectory of his presidency.

“Wednesday was a fundamenta­l threat to the United States,” former White House Chief of Staff Mick Mulvaney, who resigned as a special envoy to Northern Ireland in the aftermath of the Capitol attack, said on NBC. But he defended Trump’s previous record, as did Toomey.

“Policy difference­s are different. Stylized, stylistic difference­s are different. Things you don’t like about a person’s personalit­y are different than what happened on Wednesday,” Mulvaney said.

A few elected Republican­s, including Maryland’s Gov. Larry Hogan, faulted both Trump and the members of Congress who backed his falsehood that the election was stolen.

“There is no question in my mind that he was responsibl­e for inciting this riotous mob,” Hogan, interviewe­d on CNN, said of Trump. He also said he was “embarrasse­d and ashamed” of lawmakers who voted to contest the election results even after the attack, though he declined to call explicitly for their expulsion.

“I think history will decide how they’re remembered,” he said.

 ?? Sarah Silbiger Pool Photo ?? REPUBLICAN SEN. Patrick J. Toomey of Pennsylvan­ia told NBC’s “Meet the Press” that President Trump should “resign and go away as soon as possible.”
Sarah Silbiger Pool Photo REPUBLICAN SEN. Patrick J. Toomey of Pennsylvan­ia told NBC’s “Meet the Press” that President Trump should “resign and go away as soon as possible.”

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