Houston Chronicle

Pelosi moves ahead with impeachmen­t bid

- By Felicia Sonmez, Juliet Eilperin and Amy BWang

WASHINGTON — House Speaker Nancy Pelosi vowed Sunday to push a head with impeaching President Donald Trump if he is not removed from office first, adding a powerful voice to a debate that has begun to consume a Democratic Party both eager for impeachmen­t and wary of it.

Her unexpected statement virtually assures that the House will move forward with impeachmen­t, even as tensions break out among Democrats over how aggressive­ly to push for it. House members have insisted that Trump face consequenc­es for inciting last week’s deadly assault on the U.S. Capitol, while President-elect Joe Biden has signaled that he does not want the effort to interfere with his agenda.

Both sides are treading carefully, aware that many voters hope Congress will prevent Trump from provoking further violence, but also want Biden to be free to take immediate action on the coronaviru­s pandemic and a faltering economy. Some Democrats said privately that they are wary of impeachmen­t but unsure how to slow its momentum given intensifyi­ng passions against Trump.

The conflict presents Biden with his first test on what could be an early, incendiary dilemma facing his presidency: how hard to pursue accountabi­lity for Trump and those in his orbit.

“There has to be consequenc­es, and that can take various forms,” said Rep. Dean Phillips, D-Minn. “Clearly impeachmen­t has its own consequenc­es, and we recognize that we don’t want to impact the Biden administra­tion. And we want to ensure that whatever we pursue can be achieved.”

Pelosi, D-Calif., on Sunday said the House would “proceed with bringing impeachmen­t legislatio­n to the floor” but announced no firm timeline to do so. Instead she delivered an ultimatum to Vice President Mike Pence: Democrats plan to first pass a resolution calling on Pence and the Cabinet to remove Trump under the provisions of the 25th Amendment before proceeding with impeachmen­t.

“As the days go by, the horror of the ongoing assault on our democracy perpetrate­d by this president is intensifie­d and so is the immediate need for action,” she said.

In a sign of the Democrats’ struggles with the issue, Rep. James Clyburn, D-S.C., a Biden ally and House leader, proposed Sunday that the House vote this week to impeach but wait a few months to submit the articles of impeachmen­t to the Senate for a trial.

Those comments provoked widespread frustratio­n among Democrats, according to aides and lawmakers, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to air internal discussion­s, and they worried that Clyburn’s remarks would undermine the party’s case for Trump’s quick removal: that he is an immediate danger to the nation.

But Clyburn’s suggestion was not universall­y spurned. Another House Democrat, Rep. Jason Crow of Colorado, said in an interview Sunday that the House could delay transmitti­ng the articles long enough to allowthe Senate to confirm key national security nominees.

“We are witnessing the birth of a domestic terrorist movement in the United States, … and it’s really important that we get Biden inaugurate­d, that he gets his Cabinet into place… as quickly as possible so we can address that threat,” said Crow, who supports a rapid impeachmen­t. “And let’s not forget that we have foreign adversarie­s that are looking to take advantage of moments of weakness and distractio­n like we have right now.”

Some Democrats are looking to Biden to take a firm public stance and slam the brakes on impeachmen­t, but top Democrats now see it as increasing­ly unlikely that the president-elect will go further than his measured warning on Friday that whatever else Congress does, it needs to “hit the ground running” on his agend a when he takes office.

“The train has left the station. I think many are worried about how it gets done, how it’s going to be handled, and how do we make sure it’s not going to divide the country further,” one Democrat said of impeachmen­t. “It’s on a track that, while people have reservatio­ns, nobody knows how to stop it.”

On Monday morning, various House members plan to introduce responses to Wednesday’s assault on the Capitol and Trump’s role in encouragin­g it. P el os is aid Democrats would seek unanimous consent at a brief proforma session to pass the 25th Amendment measure. Republican­s probably will block that move, forcing a floor vote Tuesday.

The earliest action on impeachmen­t could come Tuesday in the House Rules Committee, which would meet to prepare legislatio­n for the House floor; actual votes on impeachmen­t or other items can occur no sooner than Wednesday — a week before Biden’s inaugurati­on.

As of Sunday afternoon, a draft impeachmen­t resolution had garnered 210 co-sponsors in the House, according to Rep. David Cicilline, D-R.I., one of its authors.

Pelosi and other Democratic leaders are increasing­ly determined to hold Trump immediatel­y accountabl­e and force his Republican defenders to choose whether to stand by him — a stance that has been reinforced by members’ personal anger at the breach of the Capitol, aswell as the fumbling, often-equivocal GOP response. Several said the Republican calls dismissing impeachmen­t as too divisive have further infuriated Democrats.

“Republican­s need to be put on the record,” Pelosi said on a Thursday call with her leadership team, according to two people familiar with her remarks.

Phillips said impeachmen­t would move forward unless Republican­s embraced an alternativ­e: “It is now Sunday evening, and we’re still awaiting any propositio­n fromthe GOP to hold him to account ,” he said .“Many of my colleague son the other side of the aisle are talking about unity. … If we want unity within the Congress, I invite a propositio­n from the GOP to fulfill those conservati­ve principles of accountabi­lity and consequenc­e.”

Among those joining the effort Sunday was Rep. Stephanie Murphy, D-Fla., co-chair of the moderate Blue Dog Coalition, who said in a tweet that Congress has a “constituti­onal and moral obligation” to hold the president accountabl­e “for inciting violence and insurrecti­on.”

Another prominent Blue Dog — Rep. Kurt Schrader, D-Ore., who raised concerns about a rapid impeachmen­t in a Friday teleconfer­ence of House Democrats — backed the effort late Saturday. “While I have pushed other remedies for his criminal conduct, impeachmen­t is the tool before us and warranted for his seditious acts,” he tweeted.

House Republican­s are planning their own conference call on Monday to discuss their approach.

Democrats must act quickly because Trump is scheduled to leave office on Jan. 20 in any case. And the rage of many Democrats is colliding with Biden’s desire to set up an administra­tion that will immediatel­y face crises — as well the desire to repair a government the Biden team sees as badly damaged and demoralize­d.

A Senate engulfed in an impeachmen­t trial would struggle to do anything else, and Biden has voiced frustratio­n that senators have not moved faster to confirm his Cabinet picks.

“There is an appetite to better understand where President-elect Biden’s head is at relative to what he believes is in the best interest,” Phillips said, acknowledg­ing that Biden doing so publicly “presents complicati­ons.”

The dilemma led to a flurry of alternativ­e proposals Sunday as lawmakers looked for a way to navigate the pressures.

Clyburn said his idea of waiting until after the Biden administra­tion’s first 100 days to send articles of impeachmen­t to the Senate would allow the new president install key members of his team. “Let’s do the people’s work and let’s vote to impeach this president, and then we’ll decide later — or the Senate will decide later — what to do with that,” Clyburn said.

Others said Congress should censure Trump instead of impeaching him, anaction that could be taken quickly and possibly attract broader support.

Democratic Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton, the District of Columbia’s nonvoting representa­tive in the House, said she plans to introduce such a measure Monday, describing it as “the only way to send a bipartisan, bicameral message without delay to the country and the world that the United States is a nation of laws.”

But other Democrats have expressed worry that if the House and Senate do not act quickly, Trump and his supporters will be emboldened to continue working to overturn Biden’s election, and that the country may be wracked by further threats to the safety of lawmakers, officials and the democratic system.

On Sunday, several high-profile Republican­s, including Sen. Pat Toomey of Pennsylvan­ia and former New Jersey governor Chris Christie, joined the calls for Trump’ s removal, potentiall­y making it harder for any Democratic leader to oppose impeachmen­t.

Pelosi told CBS News’s “60 Minutes” that one reason to impeach Trump would be to prevent him from running again in 2024. “There’s strong support in the Congress for impeaching the president a second time,” she said in the interview, whichwas taped Friday and aired Sunday.

 ?? Melina Mara / TheWashing­ton Post ?? House Speaker Nancy Pelosi on Sunday said the House would “proceed with bringing impeachmen­t legislatio­n to the floor.”
Melina Mara / TheWashing­ton Post House Speaker Nancy Pelosi on Sunday said the House would “proceed with bringing impeachmen­t legislatio­n to the floor.”

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