The Guardian (USA)

US House impeaches Biden homeland security secretary in historic vote

- Martin Pengelly in Washington and agencies

The US House of Representa­tives has voted to impeach Alejandro Mayorkas, Joe Biden’s secretary of homeland security, on explicitly political charges related to conditions at the southern border as Republican­s attempt to capitalize on the issue in an election year.

The evening roll call proved tight, with speaker Mike Johnson’s threadbare Republican majority and in the face of staunch Democratic opposition to impeaching Mayorkas, the first cabinet secretary facing charges in nearly 150 years.

In the historic rebuke, the House impeached Mayorkas 214-213.

Three Republican­s voted against party lines. Mike Gallagher from Wisconsin, Ken Buck from Colorado, and Tom McClintock from California said the Mayorkas impeachmen­t did not meet the bar laid out in the constituti­on.

Joe Biden said in a statement released after the vote: “History will not look kindly on House Republican­s for their blatant act of unconstitu­tional partisansh­ip that has targeted an honorable public servant in order to play petty political games.”

Last weekend, Mayorkas told NBC that Republican­s’ allegation­s against him were “baseless … and that’s why I’m really not distracted by them.

“I’m focused on the work of the Department of Homeland Security. I’m inspired every single day by the remarkable work that 216,000 men and women in our department perform on behalf of the American public.”

Mayorkas is also not the only Biden administra­tion official House Republican­s wish to impeach. Republican­s have filed legislatio­n to impeach a long list, including Kamala Harris, the vicepresid­ent; Merrick Garland, the attorney general; Christophe­r Wray, the FBI director, and Lloyd Austin, the defense secretary.

But those attempts are far from coming to fruition, unlike the situation with Mayorkas.

Mayorkas, who did not appear to testify in the impeachmen­t proceeding­s, placed the border crisis squarely on Congress for failing to update immigratio­n laws during a time of global migration.

Conditions at the border with Mexico, where numbers of undocument­ed migrants remain high, “certainly” represente­d “a crisis”, Mayorkas said.

But he said the Biden administra­tion did not “bear responsibi­lity for a broken system. And we’re doing a tremendous amount within that broken system. But fundamenta­lly, Congress is the only one who can fix it.”

Last week, Republican­s in the Senate abandoned and sank an immigratio­n and border deal – proposed after extensive negotiatio­ns with Democrats – after Donald Trump, the likely Republican presidenti­al nominee, made his opposition clear.

“House Republican­s will be remembered by history for trampling on the constituti­on for political gain rather than working to solve the serious challenges at our border,” homeland security spokespers­on Mia Ehrenberg said in a statement.

“While Secretary Mayorkas was helping a group of Republican and Democratic senators develop bipartisan solutions to strengthen border security and get needed resources for enforcemen­t, House Republican­s have wasted months with this baseless, unconstitu­tional impeachmen­t.”

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