The Guardian (USA)

Mayorkas impeachmen­t: petty, doomed … but still potentiall­y damaging

- Martin Pengelly in Washington

In 1876, the last US cabinet official to be impeached, William Belknap, resigned before the House could vote on the matter. Ulysses S Grant’s secretary of war was tried in the Senate anyway, on charges of corruption, but escaped conviction.

Nearly 150 years later, in the House on Tuesday and at the second time of asking, Republican­s corralled just enough votes to ensure Joe Biden’s secretary of homeland security, Alejandro Mayorkas, suffered Belknap’s fate. But Mayorkas has not resigned – and nor is he likely to be convicted and removed.

Democrats control the Senate, which means Mayorkas is all but certain to be acquitted at any trial, regardless of reported doubts among Republican senators about their party’s case.

After the 214-213 vote to impeach, Chuck Schumer, the Democratic Senate majority leader, set out what will happen next. House managers will present the articles of impeachmen­t after Monday’s President’s Day holiday. Senators will be sworn in as jurors. And Patty Murray of Washington state, the Democratic Senate president pro tempore, will preside thereafter.

Schumer also issued a stinging statement.

“This sham impeachmen­t effort is another embarrassm­ent for House Republican­s,” the New Yorker said. “The one and only reason for this impeachmen­t is for Speaker [Mike] Johnson to further appease Donald Trump.”

The Mayorkas impeachmen­t is of a kind with Senate Republican­s’ decision last week to detonate their own hardwon border and immigratio­n bill because Trump, their likely nominee for president, wants to campaign on the issue.

Schumer continued: “House Republican­s failed to produce any evidence that Secretary Mayorkas has committed any crime. House Republican­s failed to show he has violated the constituti­on. House Republican­s failed to present any evidence of anything resembling an impeachabl­e offense. This is a new low for House Republican­s.”

Most observers agree that the charges against Mayorkas – basically, that he performed incompeten­tly and violated immigratio­n law regarding the southern border – do not remotely rise to the level of “high crimes and misdemeano­urs”, as constituti­onally required for impeachmen­t and removal.

Perhaps with a nod to the unfortunat­e Belknap, the Biden White House weighed in, saying: “History will not look kindly on House Republican­s for their blatant act of unconstitu­tional partisansh­ip that has targeted an honorable public servant in order to play petty political games.”

But history also records that all impeachmen­ts (and impeachmen­t efforts, such as that mounted by Republican­s against Biden himself) are inherently political, so this one could prove as politicall­y potent as did those of Trump. Both Trump impeachmen­ts concerned behaviour – blackmaili­ng Ukraine for political dirt and inciting the January 6 attack on Congress – much closer by any standard to the status of high crimes and misdemeano­urs. Regardless, Republican­s ensured Trump was acquitted in both and have since fed Trump’s fierce desire for revenge.

The Mayorkas impeachmen­t was driven by Trump-aligned extremists prominentl­y including Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia.

Speaking to reporters on the Capitol steps on Tuesday, the same day the Senate passed a $95bn national security package including funding for Ukraine in its war with Russia, Greene said she was “very thankful to our Republican Congress. We’re finally working together with the American people to send a message to the Biden administra­tion that it’s our border that matters, not other countries’ borders. Our border matters.”

Claiming Mayorkas was guilty of “willful betrayal of the American people and breaking federal immigratio­n laws”, Greene also said the impeachmen­t “sends a message to America that Republican­s can get our job done when we work together and do what’s important and what the American people want us to do.”

If there were any remaining doubt that Mayorkas was impeached in service of pure politics, Greene said senators set to sit as jurors should “look at the polling. They know that our border security is the No 1 issue in every single campaign in every single state, every single city, in every single community … They better pay attention to the American people.”

It is not certain, however, that a trial will happen.

Joshua Matz, a lawyer who has written extensivel­y on impeachmen­t and worked on both impeachmen­ts of Trump, recently told Politico: “Impeachmen­t trials are meant to be deadly serious business for matters of state – not free publicity for the House majority to air policy attacks on the current administra­tion.”

The Mayorkas impeachmen­t articles, Matz said, are “so manifestly about policy disagreeme­nt rather than anything that could arguably qualify as high crimes and misdemeano­urs, that it would be unwarrante­d to waste the Senate’s time with the trial on the matter.

“The articles are formally deficient in so many ways that any trial would be flagrantly unfair and create such grave due process issues that it would be outrageous to even proceed.”

Senate Democrats could bring up a simple motion to dismiss the Mayorkas charges, a gambit which would be likely to succeed, given indicated support from the West Virginia centrist Joe Manchin, a key swing vote in the narrowly divided chamber. Less starkly, Democrats could seek to tie proceeding­s up in procedure, options including sending the charges to a committee, there to sit in limbo throughout an election year.

All choices carry political peril, however. On Wednesday, the news site Semafor quoted an unnamed Republican aide as saying: “If Democrats give Republican­s the opportunit­y to say that they are sweeping this under the rug, we will gladly take it.

“If this is the sham Democrats claim it is, why would they be afraid of holding a trial?”

 ?? Collection, Getty Images ?? William Belknap in the 1880s. The homeland security secretary, Alejandro Mayorkas, in Washington DC last year. Composite: Kean
Collection, Getty Images William Belknap in the 1880s. The homeland security secretary, Alejandro Mayorkas, in Washington DC last year. Composite: Kean

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