Houston Chronicle

Houston rep’s impeach bid again fails

Green’s third attempt to ignite House action gets only 95 votes after Democrats condemned Trump for statements deemed racist

- By Benjamin Wermund STAFF WRITER

WASHINGTON — In taking his third shot at impeaching President Donald Trump, Houston Congressma­n Al Green said he wanted to give House Democrats “the opportunit­y for us to go on record letting the world know where we stand.”

Green is now 0-3, and the House stands at 95 and 332.

Despite growing calls for impeachmen­t both on the Hill and the campaign trial, 137 Democrats joined Republican­s Wednesday in swiftly putting to rest any notion that the House will pursue action against the president anytime soon.

It was the expected outcome, as House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has for more than a year strongly resisted calls to start impeachmen­t proceeding­s, saying instead that the House should continue to investigat­e the president. Special Counsel Robert Mueller is set to testify before House lawmakers about his report on Trump and Russia next week.

“With all the respect in the world for Mr. Green, we have six committees that are following the facts in terms of any abuse of power, obstructio­n of justice and the rest,” Pelosi said. “That is the serious path that we are on.”

Trump cheered, tweeting that the House “overwhelmi­ngly voted to kill” Green’s attempt, calling it “perhaps the most ridiculous and time consuming project I have ever had to work on.”

The impeachmen­t attempt came after the House voted Tuesday to condemn Trump’s comments about four Democratic congresswo­men of color. He told them to “go back” to their own

countries on Sunday, and has doubled down since. The backlash over the president’s remarks — which have been widely called racist and xenophobic — has included chiding from a handful of Texas Republican­s.

At a rally in North Carolina on Wednesday night, Trump again went after the congresswo­men, accusing one of them, Ilhan Omar of Minnesota of “vicious anti-Semitic screeds” and sparking chants of “send her back” from the crowd. Omar, a Somali American, is the only of the four who was not born in the U.S.

Green said condemning Trump isn’t enough.

“It does not punish the president, it does not fine him — he will remain in office,” he said.

The previous two impeachmen­t attempts drew support from about 60 Democrats each.

The vote highlighte­d a growing divide over how to proceed on impeachmen­t, and whether to pursue it at all.

“It was the inevitable outcome,” said Brandon Rottinghau­s, a political science professor at the University of Houston. “There’s no consensus on how to proceed, and without consensus it would be unwise to move forward.”

But, Rottinghau­s said, it may have been a blessing for Pelosi, who has fought off calls from within her party to impeach the president since even before Democrats took the House.

“She now has evidence that the caucus is too split to proceed, and that’s, in an odd way, a gift,” he said.

Among those supporting impeachmen­t was the chairman of the House Judiciary Committee that would initiate impeachmen­t proceeding­s, U.S. Rep Jerry Nadler. The congresswo­men Trump targeted — Omar, along with U.S. Reps. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York, Rashida Tlaib of Michigan and Ayanna Pressley of Massachuse­tts — also supported impeachmen­t.

Several Texans joined them, including U.S. Reps. Sheila Jackson Lee, Sylvia Garcia, Joaquin Castro and Lloyd Doggett, who said opening an impeachmen­t inquiry was “the only effective response given Trump's lawless, total-obstructio­n policy.”

Lee, a member of the Judiciary Committee, said in an interview that Wednesday’s vote shouldn’t be read as a “reflection of what will happen ultimately” as that committee continues to investigat­e Trump, the approach Democratic leadership has backed.

“I feel comfortabl­e as a member of the Judiciary Committee that our work is continuing and it will be a seismic, sizable, significan­t final report — and recommenda­tion for articles of impeachmen­t, if that is the ultimate result of all the informatio­n,” she said.

“With all the respect in the world for Mr. Green, we have six committees that are following the facts in terms of any abuse of power, obstructio­n of justice and the rest. That is the serious path that we are on.” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi

 ?? Erin Schaff / New York Times ?? The House shot down Houston Rep. Al Green’s third attempt to impeach President Donald Trump for statements condemned as racist this week.
Erin Schaff / New York Times The House shot down Houston Rep. Al Green’s third attempt to impeach President Donald Trump for statements condemned as racist this week.

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