Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Republican Amash breaks ranks, says Trump’s conduct is ‘impeachabl­e’

- Bloomberg News (TNS)

WASHINGTON – Rep. Justin Amash of Michigan, a libertaria­n who’s often at odds with most other congressio­nal Republican­s, said Saturday he believes President Donald Trump has engaged in “impeachabl­e conduct.”

The subject of speculatio­n about a third-party presidenti­al bid in 2020, Amash also said on Twitter that he’s concluded – after reading special counsel Robert Mueller’s redacted 448-page report – that Attorney General William Barr “has deliberate­ly misreprese­nted” the findings.

“Contrary to Barr’s portrayal, Mueller’s report reveals that President Trump engaged in specific actions and a pattern of behavior that meet the threshold for impeachmen­t,” said Amash, 39, who arrived in Congress as part of the tea party wave in 2010.

Amash’s manifestol­ike string of more than a dozen tweets stopped short of actually calling for Trump’s impeachmen­t.

His observatio­ns about Trump and other assertions decrying political partisansh­ip come after published reports that the Libertaria­n Party has urged Amash to consider a third-party challenge to Trump in the 2020 presidenti­al election.

The Capitol Hill newspaper Roll Call noted that Amash hasn’t rejected the idea, and has suggested that there needs to be an alternativ­e offered to the two major parties. In his Saturday tweets, Amash offered, “Partisansh­ip has eroded our system of checks and balances.”

As for Mueller’s report, Amash said it “identified multiple examples of conduct satisfying all the elements of obstructio­n of justice.” Any person other than the president “would be indicted based on such evidence,” he said.

He explained impeachmen­t is a special form of indictment, “which does not even require probable cause that a crime has been committed.”

Impeachmen­t should be undertaken only in “extraordin­ary circumstan­ces,” said Amash. But he added that the risk in such an environmen­t is “not that Congress will employee it as a remedy too often, but rather that Congress will employ it so rarely that it cannot deter misconduct.”

He continued, “When loyalty to a political party or individual trumps loyalty to the Constituti­on, the Rule of Law – the foundation of liberty – crumbles.”

The tweets represente­d Amash’s latest break with the majority of his party. In the past, he’s been the sole House Republican to vote against Trump’s use of emergency powers to divert funds for a wall along the Mexican border, as well as the sales of munitions to Saudi Arabia.

Amash is a leader of the House Liberty Caucus. He also helped found another conservati­ve House group, the Freedom Caucus, that’s opposed to government overreach and too much spending. But he has since said he’s become disenchant­ed with that group’s loyalty to Trump.

 ?? Getty Images/tns ?? House Freedom Caucus member, Rep. Justin Amash (R-mich.), speaks during an interview at the W Hotel in Washington, D.C., in April 2017.
Getty Images/tns House Freedom Caucus member, Rep. Justin Amash (R-mich.), speaks during an interview at the W Hotel in Washington, D.C., in April 2017.

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