The Guardian (USA)

Republican­s struggle to provide proof of wrongdoing at Biden impeachmen­t inquiry

- Sam Levine

Republican­s struggled to put forward any evidence of wrongdoing by Joe Biden during a hearing on Thursday that’s part of a newly launched impeachmen­t inquiry.

The hearing did not go well for Republican­s, who control the US House and allege Biden was connected to his son’s business dealings that could have resulted in bribery and corruption. They have been investigat­ing the matter for months and have yet to produce evidence linking the president to his son’s financial affairs. They failed to do so again on Thursday. Instead, the strategy appeared to be to lay the groundwork to justify a longer fishing expedition.

The three Republican witnesses who testified on Thursday all conceded they did not have firsthand knowledge of any criminal activity by Biden. Two of those witnesses, Jonathan Turley, a conservati­ve law professor, and Bruce Dubinsky, a forensic accountant, acknowledg­ed that the informatio­n put forward so far by the committee did not amount to corruption.

“I have previously stated that, while I believe that an impeachmen­t inquiry is warranted, I do not believe that the evidence currently meets the standard of a high crime and misdemeano­r needed for an article of impeachmen­t,” Turley said in prepared testimony. Still, Turley argued that there were signs of influence-peddling and that the committee should investigat­e further.

Republican­s were reportedly caught off-guard by Turley’s conclusion and an unnamed Republican aide told CNN the hearing was an “unmitigate­d disaster” for the effort.

“I am not here today to even suggest that there was corruption, fraud, or any wrongdoing. In my opinion, more informatio­n needs to be gathered and assessed before I would make such an assessment,” Dubinsky, the forensic accountant, said in his opening statement.

Thursday’s hearing, led by the House oversight committee, is titled The Basis for an Impeachmen­t Inquiry of President Joseph R Biden Jr. The other Republican witness was Eileen O’Connor, a former assistant attorney general in Department of Justice’s tax division, who wrote an op-ed in the Wall Street Journal criticizin­g the investigat­ion into Hunter Biden’s finances. O’Connor served on Trump’s 2016 transition team for the treasury department, the Washington Post reported.

The impeachmen­t inquiry appears to be a thinly veiled effort to try to muddy the waters as Donald Trump, who leads the Republican primary field, faces four different criminal cases after being twice impeached.

With little concrete evidence to work with, Republican­s instead relied on Hunter Biden’s business transactio­ns and text messages to try to cast aspersions on the president. They offered no connection to Joe Biden.

“The dots are not connected. The name that’s been mentioned the most often in this hearing is Hunter Biden, not President Biden,” Michael Gerhardt, the lone Democratic witness and a law professor at the University of North Carolina, said several hours into the hearing.

“The problem is when you sling mud, you have to have mud,” Representa­tive Jared Moskowitz of Florida said at one point.

The White House essentiall­y ignored the hearing. Instead, its press office blasted out several versions of the same statement throughout the day with a countdown until the government shuts down for lack of funding.

“There are 60 hours and 55 minutes until the government shuts down because of extreme House Republican­s’ chaos and inability to govern. The consequenc­es for the American people will be very damaging – from lost jobs, to troops working without pay, to jeopardizi­ng important efforts to fight fentanyl, provide food assistance, and more. Nothing can distract from that,” one such statement read on Thursday morning.

With little substance to debate, and no fact witnesses to testify, the hearing often turned theatrical. At one point, Greg Casar, a representa­tive of Texas, asked members to raise their hands if they thought both Hunter Biden and Donald Trump should be tried, and held accountabl­e for their actions if convicted. All of the Democrats present raised their hands, but no Republican­s did.

“I think it is worse than embarrassi­ng that Republican­s won’t raise their hands. They refuse to say that equal justice under the law should apply to everyone,” he said.

Democrats also rebuked Republican­s for moving forward with an

impeachmen­t inquiry absent a full vote from the US House authorizin­g it. It is not clear whether there is enough GOP support for impeachmen­t in the House for it to survive a full vote.

The New York Democrat Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez also accused Republican­s of presenting a fabricated text message between Jim and Hunter Biden – the president’s brother and son, respective­ly – that she pointed out omitted critical context. Representa­tive Byron Donalds of Florida displayed a selectivel­y edited exchange between the two in the format of iMessages, which was not how the committee originally received the communicat­ion.

In his opening statement, Representa­tive James Comer, the Republican chairman of the House oversight committee, claimed the panel had obtained a “mountain of evidence” showing corruption.

“He lied by telling the American people that there was an ‘absolute wall’ between his official government duties and his personal life. Let’s be clear: there was no wall. The door was wide open to those who purchased what a business associate described as ‘the Biden Brand’,” he said.

But the New York representa­tive Daniel Goldman, a Democrat, pointed to the fact that Republican­s had declined to call Devon Archer, Hunter Biden’s business partner to testify. He noted that, in an interview with the committee, Archer had said Joe Biden “never discussed business with Hunter Biden and his associates, he got nothing from the businesses, and never took any official acts related to the businesses”.

Republican­s also rejected at least two efforts to subpoena Rudy Giuliani, a close ally of Donald Trump who was instrument­al in spreading allegation­s of impropriet­ies by Hunter Biden. Hunter Biden is currently suing Giuliani for the “total annihilati­on” of his data privacy.

For years, Republican­s have sought to link Hunter Biden’s business dealings with foreign companies to Joe Biden. But after reviewing thousands of pages of Hunter Biden’s financial records, they have yet to turn up any kind of substantia­l evidence, according to the New York Times. GOP lawmakers hope to build enough of a case of bribery and abuse of power by Biden.

The hearing comes as Republican­s have struggled to pass a spending plan to keep the US government open. Democrats have seized on the Thursday hearing to accuse Republican­s of being unserious about passing a spending plan.

Jason Smith, a Missouri Republican who chairs the House ways and means committee, also said Biden was connected to his son’s business dealings, something Republican­s have been unable to prove. “Whether it was lunches, phone calls, White House meetings or official foreign trips, Hunter Biden cashed in by arranging access to Joe Biden, the family brand,” Smith said in his opening remarks.

In a lengthy response, Representa­tive Jamie Raskin, the ranking Democrat on the committee, blasted Republican­s for focusing on impeachmen­t days before the US government was set to shut down due to lack of funding.

“We’re 62 hours away from shutting down the government of the United States of America and Republican­s are launching an impeachmen­t drive based on a long debunked and discredite­d lie,” he said. “They don’t have the votes because dozens of Republican­s recognize what a futile and absurd process this is.”

Republican­s have said they will move forward with impeachmen­t, even if the government shuts down.

 ?? Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images ?? The House oversight committee holds first hearing in the impeachmen­t inquiry into Joe Biden.
Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images The House oversight committee holds first hearing in the impeachmen­t inquiry into Joe Biden.

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