Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Biden hearing heavy on politics, light on substance

- Tribune News Service Bloomberg News

WASHINGTON — House Republican­s opened their impeachmen­t inquiry against Joe Biden Thursday with accusation­s that his son’s overseas business activities amounted to influence-peddling while still digging for evidence the president was involved.

House Oversight Committee Chair James Comer, a Kentucky Republican, focused on interactio­ns Biden had while vice president with his son Hunter’s clients and foreign payments to him and other relatives. Jamie Raskin, the panel’s top Democrat, labeled the inquiry a “Trump-ordered impeachmen­t.”

“Evidence reveals that then-vice President Joe Biden spoke, dined, and developed relationsh­ips with his family’s foreign business targets,” Comer said. “These business targets include foreign oligarchs who sent millions of dollars to this family.”

Raskin mocked the inquiry, saying House Republican­s “have got nothing on Joe Biden.” He dismissed the probe as a distractio­n from the impending government shutdown as he sat next to a countdown clock to the Oct. 1 federal funding lapse.

“If the Republican­s had a smoking gun or even a dripping water pistol, they would be presenting it today,” Raskin said, as his staff held up three cardboard boxes of documents received by the committee that he said do nothing to implicate the president.

Across the Capitol, Pennsylvan­ia Democratic Senator John Fetterman sent “Comer & his squad” a case of Bud Light — a beer that conservati­ves have boycotted because of the brand’s LBGTQ outreach — to commemorat­e the first hearing.

Democrats say the investigat­ion is more about aiding former President Donald Trump by providing a counternar­rative to the four indictment­s against him as he seeks the 2024 GOP presidenti­al nomination and a rematch with Biden. They say Republican­s have no real evidence that Biden received any funds, even after reviewing 12,000 pages of Hunter Biden’s bank records and 2,000 pages of suspicious activity reports.

At one point, Raskin forced every member of the committee to vote on whether to subpoena former Trump advisor Rudy Giuliani and his former associate, Ukrainian-born American businessma­n

Lev Parnas. Both, before the 2020 election, pressed conspiracy theories that Hunter and Joe Biden interfered in Ukrainian politics. But Parnas in July urged House Republican­s to abandon their probes into that, saying there was no evidence. Republican­s turned back the subpoena effort by tabling it on a 2019 vote.

Thursday’s hearing featured no fact witnesses who could present evidence.

Democrats called

Michael Gerhardt, a law professor from of the University of North Carolina, who testified there are “safeguards” in the impeachmen­t process, and that there should be “significan­t evidence” of wrongdoing such as bribery before moving ahead.

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