News Opinons Politics

House Democrats to Meet 4 PM Tuesday to Talk Impeachment

Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) will convene the Democratic caucus at 4:00 p.m. Eastern Daylight Time on Tuesday to discuss whether to impeach President Donald Trump.

The new development, reported by Washington Post congressional correspondent Rachel Bade on Monday evening, comes in the wake of reports late last week that President Trump encouraged Ukrainian officials to re-open inquiries into the business dealings of former president Joe Biden’s son, Hunter Biden.

As Breitbart News reported earlier this year, Biden forced out former Ukrainian prosecutor Viktor Shokin as he was investigating an energy company called Burisma Holdings, which was paying Biden handsomely as a member of its board. The former vice president even boasted to the Council of Foreign Relations last year that he had threatened to withhold $1 billion in U.S. aid unless the prosecutor was fired. (He did not tell the audience about his son’s role.) Conservatives claim Biden obstructed justice to protect his son — who enriched himself using his father’s prestige.



Healthcare system apologizes after over 500 living patients told they were dead via mail: ‘Pretty upsetting’
Kansas mayor hit with criminal charges for allegedly voting as noncitizen in several elections
Mamdani’s demographics: Who makes up his coalition? 
Hakeem Jeffries dodges question on whether Mamdani is future of Democratic Party
Fury erupts after accused teen sex predator dodges prison; families swarm courthouse demanding judge’s head
Watch: Mamdani Begs Supporters for Money on His First Day as Mayor-Elect
NY Business Leaders Already Working on Plans to Block Mamdani’s Key Policies – Gov. Hochul Could Be in Jeopardy
Trump Snapped at Lindsay Graham During Closed-Door Meeting with Senate Republicans: Report
Mamdani taps party insiders to steer transition despite vowing to ‘turn the page’ on old-guard NYC Dems
Fox News Politics Newsletter: David Hogg calls on Dems to reignite ‘American Dream’ after Mamdani win
Trump Renominates Jared Isaacman for NASA Chief, Months After Canceling His Nomination
Miami mayor gifts Trump key to the city
Kentanji Brown Jackson Gets Corrected by Trump Admin Attorney in Awkward Moment During Tariff Hearing
Multiple People Killed and Injured in Fiery UPS Plane Crash
Mass shooting suspect remains free on $60K bond as judge rejects plea to increase amount amid public outrage
See also  The role of a Comey confidant takes center stage in DOJ’s leak case

It is not clear what law, if any, Trump would have broken by urging the Ukrainian government to re-open the case. The alleged “whistleblower” in the case did not hear his conversations with Ukrainian leaders directly, and the Wall Street Journal has suggested there was no quid pro quo — that Trump did not offer (or withhold) anything in return.

Nevertheless, the story has given new enthusiasm to supporters of impeachment in the House Democratic caucus, who had been somewhat deflated after Special Counsel Robert Mueller found no evidence of Russian collusion.

In July, the House voted 332-95 to postpone an impeachment resolution. As of last week, the Democrats only had 175 votes for impeachment from their 235 member — 43 votes short of the 218 necessary for a House majority. Almost all of the Democratic presidential contenders support impeachment, but only 37% of the public support it, while half oppose impeachment, according to the most recent Politico/Morning Consult poll released last week.

On Saturday, however, in the wake of the Ukraine story, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) — who enjoys unrivaled support among the “progressive” base — tweeted: “At this point, the bigger national scandal isn’t the president’s lawbreaking behavior – it is the Democratic Party’s refusal to impeach him for it.” (She did not cite any law Trump had broken.)


Healthcare system apologizes after over 500 living patients told they were dead via mail: ‘Pretty upsetting’
Kansas mayor hit with criminal charges for allegedly voting as noncitizen in several elections
Mamdani’s demographics: Who makes up his coalition? 
Hakeem Jeffries dodges question on whether Mamdani is future of Democratic Party
Fury erupts after accused teen sex predator dodges prison; families swarm courthouse demanding judge’s head
Watch: Mamdani Begs Supporters for Money on His First Day as Mayor-Elect
NY Business Leaders Already Working on Plans to Block Mamdani’s Key Policies – Gov. Hochul Could Be in Jeopardy
Trump Snapped at Lindsay Graham During Closed-Door Meeting with Senate Republicans: Report
Mamdani taps party insiders to steer transition despite vowing to ‘turn the page’ on old-guard NYC Dems
Fox News Politics Newsletter: David Hogg calls on Dems to reignite ‘American Dream’ after Mamdani win
Trump Renominates Jared Isaacman for NASA Chief, Months After Canceling His Nomination
Miami mayor gifts Trump key to the city
Kentanji Brown Jackson Gets Corrected by Trump Admin Attorney in Awkward Moment During Tariff Hearing
Multiple People Killed and Injured in Fiery UPS Plane Crash
Mass shooting suspect remains free on $60K bond as judge rejects plea to increase amount amid public outrage
See also  Verizon to change its policies after Arctic Frost spying revelations

On Monday, Politico reported that “Democratic all-stars” — including former Vice President Al Gore and other “alumni of the Clinton and Obama administrations” — were backing impeachment. NBC News quoted a “senior House Democratic aide” who said “[t]he dam could break on Thursday” for impeachment.

Pelosi had long resisted pressure to impeach the president, having seen the backlash that hit Republicans when they impeached President Bill Clinton in the 1990s. Even though Clinton had committed actual crimes (obstructing justice and lying under oath), voters decided those did not amount to “high crimes and misdemeanors” — at least, not high enough to warrant reversing the results of a democratic election.

But on Monday, Bade reported, Pelosi had begun “sounding out members on impeachment, asking if the time has come.” Bade also reported that Democrats may use a “select committee” to conduct an impeachment inquiry, and not the contentious House Judiciary Committee run by Rep. Jerrold Nadler (D-NY), who has become a favorite Republican target.

Impeachment will not lead to President Trump’s removal from office unless the Senate votes to convict him by a two-thirds majority. Since Republicans have 53 seats, and Democrats (including independents who caucus with the Democrats) only have 47, the minority party would have to convince 20 Republicans — nearly half — to convict.

Story cited here.

Share this article:
Share on Facebook
Facebook
Tweet about this on Twitter
Twitter