The Guardian (USA)

Republican­s will try to impeach Biden ‘every week’, Adam Kinzinger says

- Martin Pengelly in New York

Republican­s will try to impeach Joe Biden every week if they retake the House in November, a rare anti-Trump Republican congressma­n predicted.

Rememberin­g repeated attempts to defund the Affordable Care Act under Barack Obama, Adam Kinzinger of Illinois said: “That’s going to look like child’s play in terms of what Marjorie Taylor Greene is going to demand of Kevin McCarthy.

“They’re going to demand an impeachmen­t vote on President Biden every week.”

Kinzinger was speaking to David Axelrod, a former Obama adviser, on his Axe Files podcast.

Kinzinger is one of two Republican­s on the House committee investigat­ing the Capitol attack Trump incited. He will retire in November. The other, Liz Cheney of Wyoming, lost her primary to a Trump-backed challenger.

Greene, from Georgia, is among farright Republican­s who have already introduced or threatened impeachmen­t articles against Biden, on issues including Covid, immigratio­n, Afghanista­n and the alleged misdemeano­rs of Hunter Biden, the president’s surviving son.

If McCarthy is to be speaker in a Republican House, the expected outcome of the midterms in November, he must corral his unruly party.

Kinzinger said: “I think it’ll be a very difficult majority for him to govern unless he just chooses to go absolutely crazy with them. In which case you may see the rise of the silent, non-existent moderate Republican that may still exist out there, but I don’t know.”

Democrats impeached Trump twice. Kinzinger voted against the first impeachmen­t, over the blackmail of Ukraine for political purposes, but for the second, over the Capitol attack. He

told Axelrod he regretted the first vote.

“You can always look back 12 years, there’s different regrets, different votes. That’s my biggest.

“At the time, I’ll say to my shame, you’re looking for a way out. It is tough to take on your party. It is tough to know you’re gonna get kicked out of the tribe. And it’s tough to make a decision that you know will cost you re-election.

“And so I was looking for a reason out. There were moments where I was like, ‘I may end up voting for this first impeachmen­t.’ And then I found a reason out.”

At the time, he said: “Since the day President Trump was elected, many Democrats in Congress have been searching for any means by which to delegitimi­se and remove him from office.

“And since then, we’ve seen them jump head first from one investigat­ion to another hoping something so treacherou­s would be uncovered that we’d have no choice but to throw him out. And at that they’ve failed miserably.”

Nine other House Republican­s voted for Trump’s second impeachmen­t, making it the most bipartisan in history. At trial in the Senate, seven Republican­s found Trump guilty, not enough for conviction.

Discussing Kinzinger’s work on the January 6 committee, Axelrod pointed to a recent poll which said 72% of Republican voters still back Trump’s lie about election fraud and say Biden is not the legitimate president.

“Tribalism is deeply ingrained,” Kinzinger said, adding: “I think people, in many cases, more than they fear death, they fear being kicked out of the tribe.”

 ?? Photograph: Patrick Semansky/AP ?? Congressma­n Adam Kinzinger: ‘I think it’ll be a very difficult majority for [Kevin McCarthy] to govern unless he just chooses to go absolutely crazy with them.’
Photograph: Patrick Semansky/AP Congressma­n Adam Kinzinger: ‘I think it’ll be a very difficult majority for [Kevin McCarthy] to govern unless he just chooses to go absolutely crazy with them.’

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