Los Angeles Times

He started push for impeachmen­t

Torrance Rep. Ted Lieu sent text that got colleagues working even as they took shelter from the siege.

- By Jennifer Haberkorn and Sarah D. Wire

Rep. Ted Lieu was locked in Capitol when he sent a fateful text.

WASHINGTON — Still taking refuge in a Capitol Hill office after violent Trump supporters besieged the House and Senate floors, Rep. Ted Lieu (DTorrance) fired off a text message to every Democrat on the House Judiciary Committee.

The committee “should start drafting articles of impeachmen­t now, regardless of what leadership says,” he wrote in the 3:09 p.m. message. “We have seen the consequenc­es of being weak against Trump and not holding him accountabl­e these last couple months. If we don’t do anything besides send strongly worded press releases, then we are complicit in battering lady justice and our Constituti­on.”

His colleagues were still scattered and panicked, most having fled just moments before angry extremists breached the doors of the U.S. Capitol and began ransacking the place.

But for those who were now safe enough to answer Lieu’s missive, the response was unanimous: Impeach.

The text message was the start of a blazingly fast impeachmen­t of President Trump that culminated Wednesday in a vote that made him the first U.S. president to be impeached two times.

Lieu didn’t need to worry about leadership opposing his effort. He said in an interview. “I was just super pissed off.”

Speaker Nancy Pelosi (DSan Francisco) told reporters the day after the attack: “My phone is exploding with, ‘Impeach, impeach, impeach.’ The president must be held accountabl­e.”

Unlike Trump’s first impeachmen­t, there was no talk about how centrist

Democrats in conservati­ve districts might vote. There was speed and clarity.

“As much as our focus at the time was to get back to the Capitol, we also recognized we had just been attacked, and this wasn’t just an attack on our country. This was an attack incited by the leader of our country,” said Rep. Eric Swalwell (DDublin). “The consensus was, we had just been attacked; we can’t let him continue to inspire attacks like this.”

Lieu, one of several California­ns who played a key role in the impeachmen­t, was holed up in the office of Rep. David Cicilline (D-R.I.) as the mob descended. The two began drafting the article immediatel­y. They were joined by Judiciary Committee staff as well as Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.), a constituti­onal law expert.

The final text, just four pages, states: “President

Trump gravely endangered the security of the United States and its institutio­ns of government. He threatened the integrity of the democratic system, interfered with the peaceful transition of power, and imperiled a coequal branch of Government. He thereby betrayed his trust as president, to the manifest injury of the people of the United States.”

Swalwell said when those who worked on the text approached Pelosi, she laid out the options for rebuking Trump, and their pros and cons: censure, the 25th Amendment or impeachmen­t.

“She was pretty determined to make it clear that the president could not stay in power,” Swalwell said.

Lawmakers’ anger grew as they learned new details in the days that followed, said Rep. Adam B. Schiff (D-Burbank), the lead House manager in the

2019-20 impeachmen­t.

“This was a situation where as each day followed the next, people’s resolution became greater and greater,” Schiff said. “The magnitude of the harm he has created has been revealed even more and more graphicall­y every day.”

Lieu, Cicilline, Swalwell and Raskin are among the impeachmen­t managers, responsibl­e for presenting the case at the Senate trial.

Some of their Republican colleagues from California decried the short process, saying that Trump wasn’t getting time to defend himself and that there wasn’t enough time for House members to weigh the facts. Impeachmen­t proceeding­s traditiona­lly take months, and involve multiple witnesses as well as testimony from constituti­onal scholars.

Elk Grove Republican Rep. Tom McClintock said

that a spur-of-the-moment impeachmen­t, full of passion, weakens the the power of Congress and “trivialize­s this power to the point of caricature.”

“I cannot think of a more petty, vindictive and gratuitous act than to impeach an already defeated president a week before he is to leave office,” McClintock said on the House floor.

San Jose Democratic Rep. Zoe Lofgren, who played a role in the last two presidenti­al impeachmen­ts and in the effort to remove President Nixon before he resigned, said a lengthy hearing process wasn’t needed.

“What happened this time was in plain view. I mean, he incited a rightwing mob of insurrecti­onists to come and overturn constituti­onal government a week ago,” she said. “You don’t need a long investigat­ion to find that out.”

 ?? House Television ?? REP. TED LIEU texted House Judiciary Committee Democrats at 3:09 p.m. as they took shelter during last week’s siege, urging them to “start drafting articles of impeachmen­t now, regardless of what leadership says.”
House Television REP. TED LIEU texted House Judiciary Committee Democrats at 3:09 p.m. as they took shelter during last week’s siege, urging them to “start drafting articles of impeachmen­t now, regardless of what leadership says.”

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