The Ukiah Daily Journal

How do you say `impeachmen­t is dead' in Russian?

- By Dana Milbank

Rep. Jared Moskowitz, a Democrat from Florida, usually wears loud ensembles and sneakers to work. But for this week's seven-hour deposition of Hunter Biden on Capitol Hill, Moskowitz came in all black: suit, tie and shoes.

“My colleagues and I are witnessing the death of the fake, faux, frivolous Joe Biden impeachmen­t inquiry,” he said by way of explaining his somber garb. “In fact, as a Jewish American, when this is over I will say the mourner's kaddish for this impeachmen­t inquiry.”

Amen. To the extent there ever was life in the case against the president, it has died after a long illness.

But more fitting than the mourner's kaddish would be to offer a Panikhida, the Russian Orthodox prayer service for the dead. For the House Republican­s' year-long attempt to impeach Biden, it now seems clear, was based on a Russian disinforma­tion campaign — and House Republican­s went along with it, either as useful idiots or knowing accomplice­s.

The Republican­s' star witness, Alexander Smirnov, has been indicted by a special counsel for fabricatin­g the claim that Joe Biden received a $5 million bribe. He was apparently doing the bidding of Russian intelligen­ce, with which, a court filing shows, he had recent contacts.

Before that, the Republican sleuths' other key witness, Gal Luft, went missing. It turned out he had been charged in a sealed indictment with arms traffickin­g and illegal lobbying work — for China. He remains on the lam.

Republican­s have also relied on the accounts of one of Hunter Biden's former business partners, who was sentenced to prison for defrauding a Native American tribe, and of a convicted fraudster House investigat­ors went to visit last week at a prison in Alabama.

Clearly, they will take dirt from any source, no matter how dubious. Even then, they have produced nothing that shows Joe Biden was involved in any way in the businesses of his son. Of course, Republican­s don't actually need any evidence to impeach the president, if they have the votes. But even the impeachmen­t ringleader, Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer (Ky.), has tiptoed away from this goal. He told a group of us staking out the Hunter Biden deposition on Wednesday that “the purpose of this investigat­ion [is] to create legislatio­n” — legislatio­n to stop “the Bidens from continuing to enrich themselves.”

Wagging two index fingers, Comer admonished: “The American people do not want families to peddle access to the tune of $200,000.” Asked whether his legislatio­n would also target the Trump family, which peddled access to the tune of about $2 billion, Comer ignored the question as he walked away.

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The indictment of Smirnov is the most damning, for he had provided, in the words of House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jim Jordan (Ohio), “the most corroborat­ing evidence we have.” And the fabricated bribery allegation is just the latest case of MAGA Republican­s trumpeting Kremlin propaganda.

They let Russia off the hook for its hacking of the Democratic National Committee and its extensive efforts to influence American social media to Donald Trump's benefit in 2016, dismissing it as the “Russia hoax.”

During Trump's 2019 impeachmen­t for trying to strong-arm Ukraine into providing dirt on Biden for the 2020 campaign, House Republican­s defended Trump by echoing Russian disinforma­tion claiming that Ukraine, not Russia, was the country that tried to meddle in the U.S. election.

Trump adviser Rudy Giuliani tried to inject disinforma­tion from an active Russian agent into the 2020 campaign, and two of his associates who worked on the effort were convicted.

Now, House Speaker Mike Johnson (La.) and his House Republican­s, some of them citing Russia's talking points, are blocking funds for Ukraine's war effort that the Senate passed overwhelmi­ngly.

Are they unwitting tools of Moscow? Or willing conduits? At the very least, they don't seem to care that they are serving as Vladimir Putin's pawns. A dozen or so witnesses testified to House impeachmen­t investigat­ors that the president was not involved in his son's businesses. The investigat­ors have produced no evidence showing that the elder Biden benefited in any way from his son's businesses or took any official action to help his son, or his brother.

Yet Comer wants so much to believe otherwise that he's willing to take the word of the indicted Smirnov over that of the FBI and of David Weiss, the Trump-appointed U.S. attorney serving as special prosecutor.

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