Texarkana Gazette

House Speaker Kevin Mccarthy floats Biden impeachmen­t inquiry

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WASHINGTON — House Speaker Kevin Mccarthy says Republican lawmakers may consider an impeachmen­t inquiry of President Joe Biden over unproven claims of financial misconduct, responding to enormous GOP pressure to demonstrat­e support for Donald Trump ahead of the 2024 presidenti­al election.

Speaking Tuesday at the Capitol, Mccarthy said the questions House Republican­s are raising about the Biden family finances need to be investigat­ed. So far, he acknowledg­ed, the House’s probes have not proven any wrongdoing, but an impeachmen­t inquiry “allows Congress to get the informatio­n to be able to know the truth.”

An impeachmen­t inquiry by the House would be a first step toward bringing articles of impeachmen­t. Such a probe could be as lengthy or swift as the House determines, potentiall­y stretching into campaign season.

“We will follow this to the end,” he said, first floating the idea late Monday on Fox News.

It’s the strongest comment yet from Mccarthy on a potential Biden impeachmen­t after the Republican leader sidelined earlier efforts by House conservati­ves to launch such an inquiry.

With a slim majority in the House, Mccarthy faces demands from Trump allies to elevate their priorities. Trump himself questioned at a Fox News town hall last week why Biden has not yet been impeached.

Mccarthy has not yet endorsed Trump, who is the GOP’S early frontrunne­r for president, or any other GOP candidates. He denied a report that he is considerin­g House votes to expunge Trump’s two impeachmen­ts as another way of showing support.

Mccarthy on Tuesday gave no timeline for launching an impeachmen­t inquiry into Biden and said he hadn’t spoken to Trump about it. He declined to say if he would be making a presidenti­al endorsemen­t.

Asked if he felt pressure from Trump, he scoffed, “Do I look like I’m under pressure?”

White House spokesman Ian Sams said the House GOP’S “eagerness to go after POTUS regardless of the truth is seemingly bottomless,” using shorthand for the President of the United States.

“Instead of focusing on the real issues Americans want us to address like continuing to lower inflation or create jobs, this is what the House GOP wants to prioritize,” Sams said on Twitter.

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