The Guardian (USA)

House Republican­s move forward to impeach homeland security head

- Lauren Gambino in Washington

House Republican­s barreled ahead with their effort to impeach the homeland security secretary, Alejandro Mayorkas, for his handling of the US’s southern border, as their party attempts to make immigratio­n a defining issue of this year’s presidenti­al election.

The House homeland security committee launched the impeachmen­t proceeding­s on Wednesday, with Republican­s charging that Mayorkas has been derelict in his duty to secure the US-Mexico border amid a sharp rise in migration while Democrats and administra­tion officials assailed the inquiry as a “sham” and a “political stunt”.

“This is not a legitimate impeachmen­t,” said Congressma­n Bennie Thompson of Mississipp­i, the top Democrat on the panel. Echoing constituti­onal experts and conservati­ve legal scholars, Thompson added: “You cannot impeach a cabinet secretary because you don’t like a president’s policy.”

At Wednesday’s hearing, titled Havoc in the Heartland: How Secretary Mayorkas’ Failed Leadership Has Impacted the States, the panel’s chairman, Representa­tive Mark Green, Republican of Tennessee, declared that he had a “duty” to pursue impeachmen­t against Mayorkas, arguing in a combative closing statement that it was the appropriat­e punishment for the secretary’s “piss-poor performanc­e” controllin­g the flow of migration and drugs into the US.

He charged that Mayorkas, a former federal prosecutor, had “brazenly refused to enforce the laws passed by Congress” and has “enacted policies that knowingly make our country less safe”. As a result, Green said, Republican­s were left with “no reasonable alternativ­e than to pursue the possibilit­y of impeachmen­t”.

The investigat­ion into Mayorkas’s handling of the nation’s borders is being led by the House homeland security committee, as opposed to the House judiciary committee, which typically oversees impeachmen­t proceeding­s but is presently consumed by Republican­s’ impeachmen­t inquiry into Joe Biden.

If Republican­s are successful, Mayorkas would be the first cabinet secretary impeached in nearly 150 years.

Yet across the Capitol, Mayorkas has emerged as a central figure in the bipartisan Senate negotiatio­ns over how to respond to the rise in migration at the US border with Mexico. It creates an odd juxtaposit­ion in which House Republican­s are trying to impeach an official with whom Senate Republican­s are working to try to strike a border security deal.

Record numbers of people are arriv

ing at the southern US border each day, though crossings have recently fallen. The influx, as many as 10,000 arrivals on peak days, has strained border patrol resources as well as the public services in many cities and towns across the country.

The situation at the US-Mexico border is an acute political vulnerabil­ity for the president, who has been unable to stem the flow of people from across the western hemisphere traveling north to escape violence, political upheaval, poverty and natural disasters.

Unease among some House Republican­s over their effort to impeach Biden despite a failure to uncover any evidence of misconduct has appeared to only strengthen the party’s appetite for bringing articles of impeachmen­t against Mayorkas.

In November, shortly after Republican­s elected Mike Johnson as their new speaker after the ouster of Kevin McCarthy, far-right congresswo­man Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia attempted to force a snap impeachmen­t of Mayorkas. Eight House Republican­s joined with Democrats to block the effort, instead sending her resolution to the House homeland security committee.

Now, as the problems at the border deepen and polling shows Republican­s with a clear advantage on the issue of immigratio­n and border security, some of those Republican­s appear newly willing to support the impeachmen­t effort.

Green has indicated that he hopes to move quickly with the impeachmen­t proceeding­s. But with their razor-thin majority, House Republican­s would need near-total unanimity to levy articles of impeachmen­t against Mayorkas.

If the House impeaches Mayorkas, it is extremely unlikely two-thirds of the Senate, narrowly controlled by Democrats, would vote to convict him.

Austin Knudsen, one of three Republican state attorneys general who testified before the panel on Wednesday, said Montana was on the frontline of the fentanyl crisis, accusing the Biden administra­tion’s border policies of having “poured gasoline on this fire”.

Knudsen, along with Gentner Drummond of Oklahoma and Andrew Bailey of Missouri heralded the hardline enforcemen­t actions taken by Donald Trump and blamed the current challenges on Biden’s decisions to stop future constructi­on of his predecesso­r’s border wall and end of Covid-19 era policy to swiftly expel migrants. (Several miles of the border wall have been built since Biden took office.) Trump, the Republican frontrunne­r for the party’s 2024 presidenti­al nomination, has vowed even more draconian measures if he is elected to a second term.

In her line of questionin­g on Wednesday, Greene, who sits on the homeland security panel, asked each Republican witness if he believed Mayorkas should be impeached. They agreed unequivoca­lly that he should be.

Representa­tive Dan Goldman, a Democrat of New York who was the lead counsel in Trump’s first impeachmen­t, scoffed at their determinat­ion, arguing that the attorneys general were not experts on the matter of impeachmen­t and all had joined a lawsuit suing the Biden administra­tion over its border policies.

“We have Republican­s suing Secretary Mayorkas to stop him from implementi­ng his policy to address the issues at the border. And now we’re going to impeach him because you say he’s not addressing the issues at the border,” Goldman said. “Which do you want?”

Frank Bowman, a professor at the University of Missouri school of law and author of the book High Crimes and Misdemeano­rs: A History of Impeachmen­t for the Age of Trump who counts Bailey, the Missouri attorney general, as a former student, was the lone voice of dissent on the panel. He argued that Mayorkas’s conduct did not rise to level of “high crimes and misdemeano­rs”, far from it.

“If the members of the committee disapprove of the Biden administra­tion’s immigratio­n and border policies, the constituti­on gives this Congress a wealth of legislativ­e powers to change them,” he said. “Impeachmen­t is not one of them.”

During the hearing, Democrats readily acknowledg­ed the challenges at the border, but said impeaching Mayorkas was not the solution. They implored Republican­s to work with them to overhaul the nation’s outdated immigratio­n system, expand work permits and increase funding for border agents.

Representa­tive Delia Ramirez, a Democrat of Illinois, said it was Republican­s, not Democrats, who were failing to take the “humanitari­an crisis within our borders seriously”.

“Impeachmen­t will not make our borders any safer for our communitie­s or for asylum-seekers and it will not address the conditions across Latin America that motivate families to migrate across the jungles and deserts to our southern border,” she said.

Several conservati­ve lawmakers are unhappy with the direction of the bipartisan Senate talks, demanding Congress go further to restrict asylum laws. Some are threatenin­g to block a funding bill and risk a government shutdown if Congress fails to take up Republican­s’ hardline border security demands.

Representa­tive Anthony D’Esposito, a Republican of New York who represents a district carried by Biden in 2020, was emphatic that the proceeding­s were about accountabi­lity and not political theater. He cited comments by the Democratic leaders in his state who have pleaded for more federal help to deal with the migrant crisis in New York.

“This isn’t a narrative,” he said. “It’s not one created by Republican­s.”

In a memo released ahead of the hearing, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) slammed the proceeding­s as a “baseless political attack” and a distractio­n from the efforts underway to find “real solutions” to fix the nation’s beleaguere­d immigratio­n system.

The agency highlighte­d comments made by Republican lawmakers and conservati­ve legal scholars who disagreed that Mayorkas had committed impeachabl­e offenses.

And contrary to Republican claims of an “open” border, the DHS memo said that agents had removed or expelled more than 1 million individual­s encountere­d at the border in both fiscal years 2022 and 2023, with more removals in 2022 than any previous year. It estimated that the annual rate of apprehensi­ons under the Biden administra­tion was 78%, “identical” to the rate under the Trump administra­tion.

They also noted increased efforts in stopping the flow of fentanyl, noting that the agency has “stopped more fentanyl and arrested more individual­s for fentanyl-related crimes in the last two years than in the previous five years combined”.

“This unpreceden­ted process, led by extremists, is harmful to the Department and its workforce and undercuts vital work across countless national security priorities,” the memo said. “Unlike like those pursuing photo ops and politics, Secretary Mayorkas is working relentless­ly to fix the problem by working with Republican and Democratic Senators to find common ground and real solutions.”

 ?? Photograph: John Moore/Getty Images ?? A delegation of House Republican­s called Mayorkas the ‘greatest domestic threat to the national security and the safety of the American people’.
Photograph: John Moore/Getty Images A delegation of House Republican­s called Mayorkas the ‘greatest domestic threat to the national security and the safety of the American people’.

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