Connecticut Post

Schumer aims to end Mayorkas impeachmen­t trial quickly

- By Mary Clare Jalonick

WASHINGTON — Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said Wednesday that he will move to dismiss impeachmen­t charges against Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, a move that would end the Senate trial before arguments even begin.

Schumer, D-N.Y., said that the two articles of impeachmen­t brought against the secretary over his handling of the U.S.Mexico border “fail to meet the high standard of high crimes and misdemeano­rs” and could set a dangerous precedent.

“For the sake of the Senate’s integrity and to protect impeachmen­t for those rare cases we truly need it, senators should dismiss today’s charges,” Schumer said as he opened the Senate.

An outright dismissal of House Republican­s’ prosecutio­n of Mayorkas, with no chance to argue the case, would be an embarrassi­ng defeat for House Republican­s and embattled House Speaker Mike Johnson, who made the impeachmen­t a priority. And it is likely to resonate politicall­y for both Republican­s and Democrats in a presidenti­al election year when border security has been a top issue.

Republican­s argue that President Joe Biden has been weak on the border as arrests for illegal crossings skyrockete­d to more than 2 million people during the last two years of his term, though they have fallen from a record-high of 250,000 in December amid heightened enforcemen­t in Mexico. Democrats say that instead of impeaching Mayorkas, Republican­s should have accepted a bipartisan Senate compromise aimed at reducing the number of migrants who come into the U.S. illegally.

The House narrowly voted in February to impeach Mayorkas for his handling of the U.S.-Mexico border, arguing in the two articles that he “willfully and systematic­ally” refused to enforce immigratio­n laws. House impeachmen­t managers appointed by Johnson, R-La., delivered the charges to the Senate on Tuesday, standing in the well of the Senate and reading them aloud to a captive audience of senators.

As Johnson signed the articles Monday in preparatio­n for sending them across the Capitol, he said Schumer 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.”

Once the senators are sworn in on Wednesday, the chamber will turn into the court of impeachmen­t, with Democratic Sen. Patty Murray of Washington presiding. Murray is the president pro tempore of the Senate, or the seniormost member of the majority party who sits in for the vice president.

The entire process could be done within hours after the trial is called to order. Schumer said he will seek an agreement from Republican­s for a period of debate — an offer they are unlikely to accept — and then allow some Republican objections. He will them move to dismiss the trial and hold a vote.

To win that vote, Schumer will need the support of all of the Senate’s Democrats and three independen­ts.

In any case, Republican­s would not be able to win the support of the two-thirds of the Senate that is needed to convict and remove Mayorkas from office — Democrats control the Senate, 51-49, and they appear to be united against the impeachmen­t effort. Not one House Democrat supported it, either.

While most Republican­s oppose quick dismissal, some have hinted they could vote with Democrats.

Sen. Mitt Romney, RUtah, said last week he wasn’t sure what he would do if there were a move to dismiss the trial. “I think it’s virtually certain that there will not be the conviction of someone when the constituti­onal test has not been met,” he said.

At the same time, Romney said he wants to at least express his view that “Mayorkas has done a terrible job, but he’s following the direction of the president and has not met the constituti­onal test of a high crime or misdemeano­r.”

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