The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Mayorkas impeachmen­t trial to start soon, but may be over before it starts

House GOP voted to impeach Homeland Security secretary.

- By Mary Clare Jalonick

WASHINGTON — House Republican­s will delay bring- ing their case against Alejan- dro Mayorkas to the Senate until next week, two months after impeaching the Home- land Security secretary. It will be the third time in five years that senators are sworn in as jurors in the court of impeachmen­t.

House Speaker Mike John- son had planned to send the impeachmen­t charges to the Senate on Wednesday, but said Tuesday he would wait until next week as Republi- cans try to make a case for a full Senate trial.

The Republican-controlled House impeached Mayorkas by a single vote margin on Feb. 13, recommendi­ng that Mayorkas be removed from office over his handling of the U.S.-Mexico border. With two articles of impeachmen­t, the House charges that Mayorkas has “willfully and system- atically” refused to enforce existing immigratio­n laws and breached the public trust by lying to Congress and saying the border was secure.

Unlike former Presi- dent Donald Trump’s two impeachmen­t trials in 2020 and 2021, though, the Senate isn’t expected to spend much time considerin­g the charges. Democrats who hold the Sen- ate majority appear to have the votes to immediatel­y dis- miss the trial, though Major- ity Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., hasn’t yet said what he plans to do.

Democrats say the charges against Mayorkas amount to a policy dispute, not the “high crimes and misdemeano­rs” laid out as a bar for impeach- ment in the Constituti­on.

Johnson and Senate Repub- licans are pushing Schumer to hold a full trial. “If he cares about the Constituti­on and ending the devastatio­n caused by Biden’s border catastroph­e, Senator Schumer will quickly schedule a full public trial and hear the arguments put forth by our impeachmen­t managers,” Johnson said in a statement.

The House’s 214-213 impeachmen­t vote in February, a narrowly successful second try after the House had rejected the effort a week ear- lier, was the first time in nearly 150 years a Cabinet secretary had been impeached. And while the Senate is now obli- gated to consider the charges, two-thirds of the chamber would have to vote to convict him. Not a single Dem- ocrat has signaled support for the impeachmen­t push.

Still, there is a process that senators have to follow under the rules for impeachmen­t. A look at the Senate’s next steps:

Convening an impeachmen­t trial

Under impeachmen­t rules, a group of House managers — members who act as prose- cutors and are appointed by the speaker — will deliver the impeachmen­t charges by read- ing the articles on the Senate floor, usually after making a ceremonial walk across the Capitol with the articles in hand. Johnson has said that will happen on Wednesday.

Senators are expected to be sworn in as jurors on Thurs- day, Schumer said in a letter to his colleagues on Friday. The Senate must then issue a summons to Mayorkas to inform him of the charges and ask for a written answer. But he would not have to appear in the Senate at any point.

The president pro tempore of the Senate, Washington Sen. Patty Murray, will preside.

What happens after the Senate jurors are sworn in is less clear. The rules generally allow the Senate to decide how to proceed.

Voting to dismiss charges

If Schumer can muster a simple majority, Democrats could dismiss the trial out- right or move to table the two impeachmen­t articles, ending the House’s effort and allowing the Senate to move on to other business.

While Schumer hasn’t yet revealed his plans, he is expected to try and dismiss the trial in some manner, if he has the votes. Democrats control the Senate, 51-49.

Getting to 51 votes would require every single Democrat and the chamber’s three Independen­ts to vote to dismiss, or potentiall­y fewer if any Republican­s join them. So far, no Democrats or Independen­ts have expressed support for moving ahead with an impeachmen­t trial.

Referring to committee

If Democrats are not able to dismiss the trial or table the articles, there is a second option: They could follow the precedent of several impeachmen­t trials for federal judges over the last century and hold a vote to create a trial committee that would investigat­e the charges.

While there are no hard rules on how to form a trial committee, the Senate has previously passed a resolution authorizin­g the party leaders to each recommend six senators and a chairperso­n to run it. Those committees had the ability to call witnesses and issue final reports to the Senate ahead of eventual trials.

While there is sufficient precedent for this approach, Democrats are likely to try and avoid it if they can halt the process completely, especially in a presidenti­al election year where immigratio­n and border security are top issues.

Moving to a trial

If the Senate were to proceed to a trial, senators would be forced to sit in their seats for the duration, maybe weeks, while the House impeachmen­t managers and lawyers representi­ng Mayorkas make their cases.

 ?? ?? Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas
Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas

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