Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Rush to impeach slows in House

Democrats plan issues agenda that includes oversight

- By Lisa Mascaro and Mary Clare Jalonick

WASHINGTON — Whatever happened to trying to impeach President Donald Trump?

As House Democrats begin laying out the vision for their new majority, that item is noticeably missing from the to-do list and firmly on the margins.

The agenda for now includes spending on public works projects, lowering health care costs and increasing oversight of the administra­tion.

It’s the balance that Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi is trying to strike in the new Congress between those on her party’s left flank who are eager to confront the president, and her instinct to prioritize the kitchen-table promises that Democrats made to voters who elected them to office.

“We shouldn’t impeach the president for political reasons and we shouldn’t not impeach the president for political reasons,” Pelosi recently told The Associated Press.

The California lawmaker, who hopes to lead Democrats as House speaker come January, calls impeachmen­t a “divisive activity” that needs to be approached with bipartisan­ship. “If the case is there, then that should be self-evident to Democrats and Republican­s,” she said.

Those pressing for impeachmen­t acknowledg­e they don’t expect action on Day One of the new majority, but they do want to see Democrats start laying the groundwork for proceeding­s. “We’re for impeachmen­t. We’re not for getsworn-in-on-Jan.-1-andstart-taking-votes,” said Kevin Mack, the lead strategist for billionair­e Tom Steyer’s Need to Impeach campaign. “Our argument is the Constituti­on outlines a process to remove a lawless president.”

In a new ad, Steyer says Democrats “just need the will” to act. He says he’s calling on Americans to join the 6 million who have already signed on to his group to “give Congress the courage to act.”

“The American people are tired of being told to wait,” Mack said. “Our argument to Congress is you are a co-equal branch of government. It’s time to do what is morally correct.”

Twice over the past two years since Trump was elected, Democrats have tried to force votes on impeachmen­t proceeding­s, winning a high-water mark of more than 60 supporters, far from the 218 needed.

Republican­s are counting on, and possibly even hoping for, impeachmen­t fervor to overtake Democrats, leading them astray from campaign promises or dealmaking with Trump.

“We know the Democrats have a plan: They want to disrupt, they want to try to impeach,” said Republican Rep. Kevin McCarthy of California after winning the GOP’s internal election to serve as minority leader in the new Congress.

Pelosi has made it clear the new majority will not engage in what she calls a “scattersho­t” approach to investigat­ing the administra­tion.

Instead, the incoming Democratic leaders of House committees will conduct oversight of the president’s business and White House dealings. Democrats are also trying to ensure special counsel Robert Mueller completes his investigat­ion of Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 election.

They may try to add legislatio­n to protect that probe to the must-pass spending bill in December to help fund the government. They want Mueller’s findings made public.

“You have to be very reluctant to do an impeachmen­t,” Rep. Jerry Nadler, D-N.Y., the incoming chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, said recently on ABC. Nadler, who served on the committee during President Bill Clinton’s impeachmen­t, cited “the trauma of an impeachmen­t process.”

Democratic leaders also know that moving quickly on impeachmen­t would not sit well with their newly elected members, who helped the party win a House majority in the recent midterms. Many come from swing districts where impeachmen­t could prove unpopular.

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP ?? Rep. Nancy Pelosi has been laying out her vision for the upcoming Democratic majority in the House.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP Rep. Nancy Pelosi has been laying out her vision for the upcoming Democratic majority in the House.

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