Yuma Sun

Senate rejects impeachmen­t articles against Mayorkas

- BY MARY CLARE JALONICK AND FARNOUSH AMIRI

WASHINGTON – The Senate dismissed all impeachmen­t charges against Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas on Wednesday, ending the House Republican push to remove the Cabinet secretary from office over his handling of the the U.s.-mexico border and shutting down his trial before arguments even began.

Senators voted to dismiss both articles of impeachmen­t and end the proceeding­s, with Democrats arguing that the articles were unconstitu­tional. The first article charged Mayorkas with “willful and systemic refusal to comply” with immigratio­n law and second article charged him with a “breach of trust” for saying the border was secure. The votes were 51-48 and 51-49, both along party lines.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said the House Republican­s’ charges failed to meet “the high standard of high crimes and misdemeano­rs” and could set a dangerous precedent.

“For the sake of the Senate’s integrity and to protect impeachmen­t for those rare cases we truly need it, senators should dismiss today’s charges,” said Schumer, D-N.Y., as he opened Wednesday’s session.

Senate Republican­s had argued for a full impeachmen­t trial after the House narrowly voted in February to impeach Mayorkas for his handling of the border, stating in the two articles that he “willfully and systematic­ally” refused to enforce immigratio­n laws.

An outright dismissal of House Republican­s’ prosecutio­n of Mayorkas, with no chance to argue the case, is an embarrassi­ng defeat for House Republican­s and embattled House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-LA., who made the impeachmen­t a priority. And it is likely to resonate politicall­y for both Republican­s and Democrats in a presidenti­al election year when border security has been a top issue.

Republican­s argue that President Joe Biden has been weak on the border as arrests for illegal crossings skyrockete­d to more than 2 million people during the last two years of his term, though they have fallen from a record high of 250,000 in December amid heightened enforcemen­t in Mexico. Democrats say that instead of impeaching Mayorkas, Republican­s should have accepted a bipartisan Senate compromise aimed at reducing the number of migrants who come into the U.S.

illegally.

House impeachmen­t managers delivered the charges to the Senate on Tuesday, standing in the well of the Senate and reading them aloud to a captive audience. But they did not get a chance to present the case before the Senate dismissed it.

The historic nature of the trial – the first time in nearly 150 years that a Cabinet secretary was impeached – contrasted with the almost routine feel of the proceeding­s after senators have sat through two previous impeachmen­t trials against former President Donald Trump in 2020 and 2021. And with a quick dismissal almost inevitable, the Senate never even set up the chamber for the occasion, which usually includes tables on each side for the impeachmen­t managers and defense lawyers.

Still, there was a bit of the traditiona­l pomp. As the trial began, senators approached the front of the Senate in groups of four to sign an oath book that is stored in the National Archives.

Schumer called for the votes to dismiss the two charges after Republican­s rejected a proposed agreement for Senate debate time and several votes on GOP objections. Missouri Sen. Eric Schmitt stood in the chamber and said Republican­s wouldn’t accept Schumer’s offer because Democrats were “bulldozing 200 years of precedent” on impeachmen­ts by trying to dismiss the trial.

Angry Republican­s called for several votes to delay the inevitable final outcome, but none of them passed as Democrats and three Independen­ts held together.

Frustrated, Senate Republican Leader Mitch Mcconnell, R-KY., said “history will not judge this moment well.”

“This process must not be abused,” Mcconnell said. “It

must not be short-circuited.”

At the same time, Republican­s similarly moved to dismiss former President Donald Trump’s second impeachmen­t trial in 2021, weeks after the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol. All but five GOP senators – including Mcconnell – voted to end the trial, arguing it was unconstitu­tional because Trump had already left office.

After Democrats dismissed the charges, Johnson and members of his House GOP leadership team said in a joint statement that “by voting unanimousl­y to bypass their constituti­onal responsibi­lity, every single Senate Democrat has issued their full endorsemen­t of the Biden Administra­tion’s dangerous open border policies.”

Even if the Senate had held a trial, Republican­s would not have been able to win the support of the two-thirds of the Senate that is needed to convict and remove Mayorkas from office – Democrats control the Senate, 51-49, and they remained united against the impeachmen­t effort. Not one House Democrat supported it, either.

Even some Republican­s questioned the impeachmen­t effort from the start. Utah Sen. Mitt Romney had said for weeks that he was considerin­g voting with Democrats to dismiss the charges but ultimately voted with his own party. After the votes, he said he does not believe the charges rise to high crimes but he did not want to dismiss them because “it was important to engage in some

level of debate.”

Mayorkas, who was in New York on Wednesday to launch a campaign for children’s online safety, reiterated that he’s focused on the work of his department. “The Senate is going to do what the Senate considers to be appropriat­e as that proceeds,” he said. “I am here in New York City on Wednesday morning fighting online sexual exploitati­on and abuse. I’m focused on our mission.”

Department spokeswoma­n Mia Ehrenberg said after the votes that the Senate’s decision to end the trial “proves definitive­ly that there was no evidence or Constituti­onal grounds to justify impeachmen­t.”

Johnson delayed sending the articles to the Senate for weeks while both chambers finished work on government funding legislatio­n and took a two-week recess. Johnson had said he would send them to the Senate last week, but he punted again after Senate Republican­s said they wanted more time to prepare.

At a hearing with Mayorkas on Tuesday about President Joe Biden’s budget request for the department, some of the House impeachmen­t managers previewed the arguments they would have made.

Tennessee Rep. Mark Green, the chairman of the House Homeland Security panel, told the secretary he has a duty under the law to control and guard U.S. borders, and “during your three years as secretary, you have failed to fulfill this oath. You

have refused to comply with the laws passed by Congress, and you have breached the public trust.”

Mayorkas defended the department’s efforts but said the nation’s immigratio­n system is “fundamenta­lly broken, and only Congress can fix it.”

The impeachmen­t trial was the third in five years. Democrats impeached Trump twice, once over his dealings with Ukraine and the second time in the days after the Capitol attack. Trump was acquitted by the Senate both times.

Schumer said the charges against Mayorkas did not compare to those against Trump and were engineered to help the former president as he runs again this year. He said the Republican charges were policy disputes, not high crimes, and it was important to set a precedent.

“Secretary Mayorkas has not been accused of treason or accepting bribes or unlawfully attacking our elections or anything of the sort,” Schumer said. “He did not blackmail a foreign power to dig dirt on a political opponent. Nor did he incite a violent mob to wage an insurrecti­on against the peaceful transfer of power.”

He called the Republican case “an illegitima­te and profane abuse of the U.S. Constituti­on.”

Connecticu­t Sen. Chris Murphy, a Democrat, acknowledg­ed that dismissing the trial was “a different Senate process,” but said the “risk of normalizin­g what the House did is bigger than the risk of establishi­ng a new precedent in the Senate.”

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? IN THIS IMAGE FROM VIDEO FROM SENATE TELEVISION, Sen. Patty Murray, D-wash., presiding over the Senate acting as a court of impeachmen­t, announces the results of the vote to adjourn the court of impeachmen­t, at the impeachmen­t trial of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas on the Senate oor at the U.S. Capitol on Wednesday in Washington.
ASSOCIATED PRESS IN THIS IMAGE FROM VIDEO FROM SENATE TELEVISION, Sen. Patty Murray, D-wash., presiding over the Senate acting as a court of impeachmen­t, announces the results of the vote to adjourn the court of impeachmen­t, at the impeachmen­t trial of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas on the Senate oor at the U.S. Capitol on Wednesday in Washington.
 ?? ?? JOSE LUIS MAGANA VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS HOMELAND SECURITY SECRETARY ALEJANDRO MAYORKAS testi es before a House committee in Washington on Tuesday.
JOSE LUIS MAGANA VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS HOMELAND SECURITY SECRETARY ALEJANDRO MAYORKAS testi es before a House committee in Washington on Tuesday.

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