The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

House GOP send Mayorkas impeachmen­t articles to Senate

- By Mary Clare Jalonick and Stephen Groves

WASHINGTON — House impeachmen­t managers walked two articles of impeachmen­t against Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas across the Capitol to the Senate on Tuesday, forcing senators to convene a trial on the allegation­s that he has “willfully and systematic­ally” refused to enforce immigratio­n laws.

While the Senate is obligated to hold a trial under the rules of impeachmen­t once the charges are walked across the Capitol, the proceeding­s may not last long. Democrats are expected to try to dismiss or table the charges later this week before the full arguments get underway.

Republican­s have argued there should be a full trial. As Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., signed the articles Monday in preparatio­n for sending them across the Capitol, he said Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., should convene a trial to “hold those who engineered this crisis to full account.”

Schumer “is the only impediment to delivering accountabi­lity for the American people,” Johnson said. “Pursuant to the Constituti­on, the House demands a trial.”

Majority Democrats have said the GOP case against Mayorkas doesn’t rise to the “high crimes and misdemeano­rs” laid out as a bar for impeachmen­t in the Constituti­on, and Schumer probably has enough votes to end the trial immediatel­y if he decides to do so. The proceeding­s will not begin until Wednesday.

Schumer has said he wants to “address this issue as expeditiou­sly as possible.”

“Impeachmen­t should never be used to settle a policy disagreeme­nt,” Schumer said. “That would set a horrible precedent for the Congress.”

Senators will be sworn in Wednesday as jurors, turning the chamber into the court of impeachmen­t. The Senate will then issue a summons to Mayorkas to inform him of the charges and ask for a written answer. He will not have to appear in the Senate.

What happens after that is is unclear. Impeachmen­t rules generally allow the Senate to decide how to proceed.

The House narrowly voted in February to impeach Mayorkas for his handling of the U.S.-Mexico border. House Republican­s charged in two articles of impeachmen­t that Mayorkas has not only refused to enforce existing law but also breached the public trust by lying to Congress and saying the border was secure. It was the first time in nearly 150 years a Cabinet secretary was impeached.

Since then, Johnson has delayed sending the articles to the Senate for weeks while both chambers finished work on government funding legislatio­n and took a two-week recess. Johnson had said he would send them to the Senate last week, but he punted again after Senate Republican­s said they wanted more time to prepare. South Dakota Sen. John Thune, the Senate’s No. 2 Republican, has said the Senate needs to hold a full trial at which it can examine the evidence against Mayorkas and come to a conclusion.

“This is an absolute debacle at the southern border,” Thune said. “It is a national security crisis. There needs to be accountabi­lity.”

House impeachmen­t managers — members who act as prosecutor­s and are appointed by the speaker — previewed some of their arguments at a hearing with Mayorkas on Tuesday morning on President Joe Biden’s budget request for the department.

House Homeland Security Chairman Mark Green, a Tennessee Republican who is one of the managers, told the secretary that he has a duty under the law to control and guard U.S. borders, and “during your three years as secretary, you have failed to fulfill this oath. You have refused to comply with the laws passed by Congress, and you have breached the public trust.”

Mayorkas defended the department’s efforts but said the nation’s immigratio­n system is “fundamenta­lly broken, and only Congress can fix it.”

After the jurors are sworn in, Senate Republican­s are likely to try to raise a series of objections if Schumer calls a vote to dismiss or table, an effort to both protest and delay the move. But ultimately they cannot block a dismissal if majority Democrats have the votes.

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