Times Record

House GOP moves to impeach Mayorkas

Members accuse top border security official of failing to enforce laws

- Richard Cowan

WASHINGTON – The Republican­controlled U.S. House of Representa­tives on Tuesday delivered two articles of impeachmen­t against President Joe Biden’s top border security official to the Democratic-majority Senate, which is expected to quickly defeat the effort.

House Republican “managers” who hope to argue their case for removing Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas from office read aloud to the Senate their charges of failing to enforce U.S. immigratio­n laws and lying to Congress.

Senators sat silently at their desks. The politicall­y charged effort comes following record-setting levels of illegal immigratio­n last year. Voters cite immigratio­n as a top concern ahead of the Nov. 5 presidenti­al and congressio­nal elections.

The 100 senators are due on Wednesday to be sworn in as jurors for a trial that could take at least a week.

However, top Senate Democrat Chuck Schumer is expected to try to end it before it starts. He and other Democrats argue that House Republican­s are motivated by political concerns and have failed to demonstrat­e illegal actions on Mayorkas’ part.

“Every time there’s a policy disagreeme­nt in the House, they send it over here and tie the Senate in knots to do an impeachmen­t trial? That’s absurd. That’s an abuse of the process. That is more chaos,” Schumer said in a speech earlier in the day.

Republican­s were expected to use procedural hurdles to prevent Democrats from dismissing the case, or at least slow them down.

“Never before has the Senate agreed to a motion to table articles of impeachmen­t. Not for an officer of either party. Not once,” Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell said in a Senate speech.

Earlier in the day, Mayorkas spent nearly three hours testifying to the House Homeland Security Committee – the panel that originated his impeachmen­t. He was called to testify about his agency’s budget for next year, but impeachmen­t permeated the hearing.

“I thank you for coming. I understand the emotions of being here today,” Republican Chairman Mark Green said in his closing statement.

Some lawmakers have argued that impeachmen­t is a poor use of time as Congress confronts global worries, including the risk of the Israel-Hamas war turning into a regional conflict and Russia gaining ground in its war against Ukraine.

Several Republican­s have said removing Mayorkas from office would accomplish little, as Biden’s immigratio­n policies would remain in force.

Mayorkas, a former federal prosecutor, denies the House charges. Biden is standing behind him, and even some Republican­s have said they see no illegal activities to back up the allegation­s.

While many Republican­s accuse Mayorkas of creating a “crisis” that jeopardize­s national security due to numbers of migrants arriving at the border with Mexico, the House had been in no rush to deliver its impeachmen­t papers to the Senate, despite having OK’d them over two months ago.

Biden’s election rival, Republican former President Donald Trump, has made immigratio­n a key focus of his campaign and earlier this year helped torpedo a bipartisan Senate border bill that would have toughened enforcemen­t.

Mayorkas is only the second presidenti­al Cabinet official to face removal through impeachmen­t. The last time was in 1876.

 ?? ?? Mayorkas
Mayorkas

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States