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Speaker bristles over I-word

House panel OKs hearing guidelines on impeachmen­t

- BY MARY CLARE JALONICK

Despite committee setting stage for impeachmen­t, Nancy Pelosi stops short of saying the House is ready.

WASHINGTON — House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerrold Nadler tried to clear up confusion within his caucus about impeachmen­t on Thursday as the committee approved guidelines for impeachmen­t hearings on President Donald Trump.

Nadler says there’s no uncertaint­y about what his committee is doing: It’s an impeachmen­t investigat­ion, no matter how you want to phrase it.

Some of Nadler’s fellow Democrats — including House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer — have stumbled over how to explain what they’re doing, and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has been reluctant to echo the committee’s assertions that they are in the midst of an impeachmen­t probe.

At a news conference after the committee vote, Pelosi was on the defensive. She said she supports what the committee is doing, and “I salute them for that work.”

She said, though, that when she travels the country, “people are saying it’s good to be careful about how we proceed.”

Impeachmen­t has divided Democrats who control the House. Democrats on Nadler’s committee, including some of the most liberal members of the House, have been eager to move forward with the process.

But moderates, mostly first-term lawmakers who handed their party the majority in the 2018 election, are concerned about the committee’s drumbeat on impeachmen­t and the attention that comes with that continued action.

Given those divisions, Nadler and Pelosi have been talking about impeachmen­t very differentl­y. While Nadler has been clear that his committee is moving ahead, Pelosi is reluctant to mention the “I” word and has repeatedly said the strategy is to “legislate, investigat­e and litigate.”

In private meetings, she has urged caution and told the caucus that the public isn’t there yet on impeachmen­t.

At the same time, she has signed off on the committee’s moves.

Pressed on whether there were mixed messages coming from leadership and the committee, she wouldn’t answer. “I have said what I am going to say on the subject,” Pelosi said.

Nadler, too, declined to answer a similar question. “I’m not going to get into that,” he said after the committee’s vote.

At the hearing, he was forceful about the Judiciary panel’s path.

“Some call this process an impeachmen­t inquiry. Some call it an impeachmen­t investigat­ion. There is no legal difference between these terms, and I no longer care to argue about the nomenclatu­re,” Nadler, DN.Y., said as he opened the meeting.

“But let me clear up any remaining doubt: The conduct under investigat­ion poses a threat to our democracy. We have an obligation to respond to this threat. And we are doing so.”

The confusion was highlighte­d Wednesday when Hoyer, D-Md., indicated to reporters that there was not an impeachmen­t investigat­ion — and then issued a clarificat­ion saying he thought the question was “in regards to whether the full House is actively considerin­g articles of impeachmen­t, which we are not at this time.”

Like Pelosi, he said he supported the committee’s work.

As the committee said it would move ahead, several freshman lawmakers met with Nadler on Wednesday and expressed concerns about the path ahead.

“It’s sucking the air out of all the good stuff that we’re doing, so that’s our concern,” said Florida Rep. Donna Shalala, who attended the meeting. She said very few constituen­ts in her swing district asked her about impeachmen­t over the August recess.

With lawmakers divided, it’s unclear whether the impeachmen­t process will ever move beyond the committee’s investigat­ion.

The committee would have to introduce impeachmen­t articles against Trump and win approval from the House to bring charges. The Republican­led Senate is unlikely to convict Trump and remove him from office.

Republican­s expressed their frustratio­n with the entire process before the committee voted on Thursday. They say the committee cannot be in impeachmen­t because the House has never voted to open an official inquiry.

Georgia Rep. Doug Collins, the top Republican on the committee, said the committee “has become a giant Instagram filter it’s put in there to look like something, but it’s really not.”

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP PHOTOS ?? House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has said the strategy is to “legislate, investigat­e and litigate.”
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP PHOTOS House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has said the strategy is to “legislate, investigat­e and litigate.”
 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP ?? Chairman Nadler says there’s no uncertaint­y on what his panel is doing.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP Chairman Nadler says there’s no uncertaint­y on what his panel is doing.

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