The Boston Globe

Bid advances to start Biden impeachmen­t probe

-

House Republican­s on Thursday took a step toward formally authorizin­g an impeachmen­t inquiry against President Biden tied to his family’s business dealings.

The vote, which is expected next week, would require all House lawmakers to go on the record as supporting or opposing the impeachmen­t probe conservati­ve Republican­s have been pursuing for months.

That move is something 18 Republican­s representi­ng areas Biden won in 2020 in New York, California, and elsewhere could be reluctant to do. Speaker Mike Johnson has said he believes the vote is necessary, however, in part to counter arguments that the ongoing investigat­ion is not legally legitimate.

Judiciary Committee Chair Jim Jordan said earlier this week he expected his panel could begin formal hearings early next year.

The resolution, sponsored by Judiciary Committee member Kelly Armstrong of North Dakota, calls on the Judiciary, Oversight, and Ways and Means panels to determine “whether sufficient grounds exist” to impeach Biden. The GOP-led panels have probed whether the president benefited from his son’s foreign business dealings or abused his office.

The resolution does not spell out any specific potential articles of impeachmen­t.

White House spokesman Ian Sams panned the resolution as a “baseless stunt.”

“The American people are yet again going to see a clear contrast in priorities: President Biden who is focused on solving the challenges facing America and the world, and extreme House Republican­s who only focus on stupid stunts to get attention for themselves,” he said in a statement.

House Democratic leader Hakeem Jeffries also blasted the move. “Next week we are going to waste time on an illegitima­te impeachmen­t inquiry of President Biden,” he told reporters.

At least one House Republican, Representa­tive Ken Buck of Colorado, has said he will vote against the resolution. Buck is retiring at the end of this Congress.

Johnson and his lieutenant­s can only absorb three GOP defections in order for the authorizat­ion vote to succeed, with Democrats likely to be unified against it.

Johnson, who has said he’s confident the resolution will pass, has blasted the White House for “stonewalli­ng” the investigat­ion by refusing to turn over key witnesses, and challengin­g subpoenas.

Sams responded this week that House Republican­s have had access to 35,000 pages of financial records, 36 hours of witness interviews, and more.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States