News Opinons Politics

Democrats Privately Urging Pelosi to Hold Impeachment Inquiry Vote


Some House Democrats are privately calling on Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) to hold a vote to formalize the impeachment inquiry to undermine Republican criticism that the process is illegitimate, Politico reported this week.

So far, Pelosi has refused to schedule a vote, arguing that the Constitution and House rules do not require the lawmakers to do so.

Meanwhile, the White House and its Republican congressional allies contend that such a vote is necessary to legitimize the inquiry per the recognized standards of previous impeachment efforts.


Politico reported:

Some Democratic lawmakers and aides have begun to say privately — and, to a lesser extent, publicly — that the House should just vote to formalize the inquiry, robbing the GOP of its main talking point.


Tenn. Passes ‘Baby Olivia Act’ Requiring Public Schools to Show Students Unborn Babies’ Development
‘The Lion King’ Prequel Director Responds to Fans Calling Disney a ‘Soulless Machine’
Sen. Tom Cotton takes aim at student loan forgiveness for anti-Israel agitators
2024 Showdown: Biden’s bump has flatlined in the polls
Shocking Number of Anti-Israel Protesters at Columbia Weren’t Students: Law Enforcement
Fox News Anchor Goes Missing from the Air Due to 16-Year-Old Son’s Medical Emergency
Major US law firm sues Students for Justice in Palestine for alleged support of Hamas ‘terrorist activities’
Video of Tree Spewing Jet of Water Has 6 Million Views and Counting, But Can You Spot the Detail Proving It’s a Fake?
President Biden condemns violent anti-Israel protests, won’t call up National Guard
Whistleblower at Company That Supplies Boeing Fuselages Dies at Age 45
Trump slams ‘radical left lunatics’ creating chaos on college campuses nationwide
Mexican Authorities Target Arizona Rancher Accused of Shooting Illegal Immigrant: Attorney
Report: Explosive Incident Was ‘the Last Straw’ That Got ABC Meteorologist Fired
‘No leadership’: Resurfaced post comes back to haunt Biden after anti-Israel protests sweep the nation
Sen Mike Lee targets university grants, cites ‘woke DEI programs,’ anti-Israel riots

Though a small but growing chorus of Democrats has started urging a vote simply to undercut this GOP talking point, others say that nothing will stop Trump and his supporters from claiming Democrats’ efforts are unfair and inconsistent with past impeachment procedures. They say the party shouldn’t take the White House’s bait, arguing that the president’s defenders will simply find other reasons to not comply with the inquiry.

The “private” debate on whether or not to hold a vote “is threatening to cleave Democrats’ unified front” in favor of impeachment, the news outlet added.

Rep. John Yarmuth (D-KY) publicly called for a vote, telling Politico,“If Nancy asked me, I would say sure, let’s have a vote. Everybody’s on record, so they’re not going to vote any differently. What’s the danger in having a vote to formalize it?”

House lawmakers voted to allow an investigation into whether to impeach President Bill Clinton and President Richard Nixon. Republicans have pointed to those votes as evidence that Democrats are acting in an unfair and illegitimate manner.

Politico noted:


Tenn. Passes ‘Baby Olivia Act’ Requiring Public Schools to Show Students Unborn Babies’ Development
‘The Lion King’ Prequel Director Responds to Fans Calling Disney a ‘Soulless Machine’
Sen. Tom Cotton takes aim at student loan forgiveness for anti-Israel agitators
2024 Showdown: Biden’s bump has flatlined in the polls
Shocking Number of Anti-Israel Protesters at Columbia Weren’t Students: Law Enforcement
Fox News Anchor Goes Missing from the Air Due to 16-Year-Old Son’s Medical Emergency
Major US law firm sues Students for Justice in Palestine for alleged support of Hamas ‘terrorist activities’
Video of Tree Spewing Jet of Water Has 6 Million Views and Counting, But Can You Spot the Detail Proving It’s a Fake?
President Biden condemns violent anti-Israel protests, won’t call up National Guard
Whistleblower at Company That Supplies Boeing Fuselages Dies at Age 45
Trump slams ‘radical left lunatics’ creating chaos on college campuses nationwide
Mexican Authorities Target Arizona Rancher Accused of Shooting Illegal Immigrant: Attorney
Report: Explosive Incident Was ‘the Last Straw’ That Got ABC Meteorologist Fired
‘No leadership’: Resurfaced post comes back to haunt Biden after anti-Israel protests sweep the nation
Sen Mike Lee targets university grants, cites ‘woke DEI programs,’ anti-Israel riots

Democrats have long argued that they don’t need a vote to launch formal impeachment proceedings, even if that had been the practice in prior presidential impeachment processes. In fact, House lawyers backed by Pelosi have made that argument in a succession of court cases seeking evidence to support their impeachment inquiry, and proponents of that position worry a formal vote would undercut their legal claims.

Similarly, Democrats are worried that a near-term floor vote would drive away a handful of Republicans who are wavering over whether to support impeachment proceedings. A party-line vote would hand the White House another talking point, they argue: that impeachment is a purely partisan effort by Democrats.

In a letter to Pelosi and the House chairmen pursuing the impeachment inquiry, the White House said the Democrats were conducting a “constitutionally invalid” and “illegitimate” impeachment probe that absolves lawmakers of “taking political accountability.”

The White House said it would not cooperate with the ongoing “partisan” impeachment investigation. Although the letter stopped short of explicitly calling on Pelosi to hold a vote, it all but dared the Speaker to do so.

Most of the 235 members of the House Democratic Caucus support the impeachment probe, but there are still eight who did not, as of Thursday afternoon, a tally from the New York Times revealed.

Story cited here.

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

→ What are your thoughts? ←
Scroll down to leave a comment: