The Guardian (USA)

Biden on Republican impeachmen­t bid: ‘They want to shut down the government’

- Martin Pengelly

Joe Biden said Republican­s launched an impeachmen­t inquiry against him because “they want to shut down the government”.

Biden was speaking at a campaign event in McLean, Virginia, on Wednesday, a day after the House speaker, Kevin McCarthy, conceded to pressure from the right of his party and announced the inquiry.

“I don’t know quite why, but they just knew they wanted to impeach me,” Biden said. “And now, the best I can tell, they want to impeach me because they want to shut down the government.”

Without agreement on new funding by 30 September, the federal government will at least partially shut down. Hard-right Republican­s are demanding cuts to some spending and increases in other areas, particular­ly immigratio­n enforcemen­t.

Some made an impeachmen­t inquiry – regarding the business affairs of the president’s son, Hunter Biden, and unsubstant­iated allegation­s of corruption involving Joe Biden – a condition of support for keeping the government open.

Given he must run the House with just a five-seat majority, McCarthy is at the mercy of such pressure. With more than five Republican­s having expressed skepticism about whether impeachmen­t would be merited, the speaker skipped a vote on whether to open an inquiry.

That followed the example of Nancy Pelosi, his Democratic predecesso­r, who did not hold a House vote before proceeding­s against Donald Trump began in 2019. But it also opened McCarthy to accusation­s of hypocrisy, given he excoriated Pelosi and recently told rightwing news outlets he would hold a vote.

On Thursday, Pelosi told MSNBC: “Don’t blame it on me. Just take responsibi­lity for what you were doing there, and don’t misreprese­nt the care that we took, the respect that we had for the institutio­n to go forward in a way that really addressed the high crimes and misdemeano­rs of Donald Trump.”

As spending bills remained in limbo, Republican­s emerged from a closeddoor meeting to say tensions between McCarthy and the hard right had prompted some forthright language from the speaker.

“If you want to file a motion to vacate, then file the fucking motion,” McCarthy said, according to Brian Mast of Florida.

A motion to vacate would force a vote on whether McCarthy should stay in his role.

McCarthy told reporters: “I showed frustratio­n in here because I am frustrated. Frustrated with some people in the conference.”

After an impeachmen­t inquiry, the full House must vote on whether the president should be impeached. A yes vote sends the president to the Senate for trial. A vote there decides if the president will be acquitted, or convicted and removed.

Trump was impeached twice, first for seeking political dirt on the Biden family and others in Ukraine, then for inciting the January 6 attack on Congress. The second Trump impeachmen­t was the most bipartisan in history, with 10 House Republican­s voting to impeach and seven Republican senators voting to convict. But enough Senate Republican­s stayed loyal to see Trump acquitted.

The other impeached presidents – Andrew Johnson (1868) and Bill Clinton (1998) – also survived Senate trials. As Democrats now hold the Senate, the effort against Biden stands next to no chance of succeeding.

In an interview broadcast on Thursday, Trump told the SiriusXM host Megyn Kelly his impeachmen­ts were the key driver of Biden’s.

“I think had they not done it to me … perhaps you wouldn’t have it being done to them. And this is going to happen with indictment­s, too,” Trump said.

The former president faces 91 criminal charges under four indictment­s, for federal and state election subversion, retention of classified informatio­n and hush money payments. Denying wrongdoing, he claims political persecutio­n.

In Virginia, Biden said: “So look, look, I got a job to do. Everybody always asked about impeachmen­t. I get up every day, not a joke, not focused on impeachmen­t. I’ve got a job to do. I’ve got to deal with the issues that affect the American people every single solitary day.”

Nonetheles­s, the White House has reportedly spent more than a year setting up a war room to push back at Republican invective and seek to shape the media narrative as the impeachmen­t process progresses.

On Thursday, Biden’s spokespers­on for oversight and investigat­ions, Ian Sams, jumped on remarks by the California Republican Darrell Issa, a member of the House judiciary committee that will take part in the impeachmen­t inquiry.

“There has to be an aha moment,” Issa told CNN, adding: “The actual participat­ion [in Hunter’s deals] by the vice-president and now president, that still has to be discovered and or nailed down.”

Issa, Sams said, had admitted Republican­s were on “an evidence-free wild goose chase”.

CNN also spoke to Tom Cole of Oklahoma, a veteran House Republican. Amid widespread questions about how voters will see impeachmen­t proceeding­s against Biden, Cole said he did not see the move “as good politics” by his party.

 ?? ?? Joe Biden with his wife Jill at the White House on Wednesday. Photograph: Shuttersto­ck
Joe Biden with his wife Jill at the White House on Wednesday. Photograph: Shuttersto­ck

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