Democrats mock Biden impeachment, but it could affect re-election bid
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[September 14, 2023]
By Steve Holland and Jeff Mason
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Asked about Republicans launching an impeachment
inquiry into U.S. President Joe Biden in Congress, Pennsylvania
Democratic Senator John Fetterman clutched his head in mock horror and
declared "Oh my God, really?" before bursting into laughter.
"Ooooh, don't do it," Fetterman said mockingly on Tuesday, as he walked
off.
Democrats have ridiculed the decision by Republican House of
Representatives Speaker Kevin McCarthy to launch the inquiry, calling it
"absurd," "a joke" and a "shiny new object to distract the public from
the fact that the GOP (Republicans) can't even pass bills to fund the
government."
But the inquiry could cast a long shadow over Biden's 2024 campaign for
re-election.
Even if it turns up no concrete evidence of wrongdoing, the probe should
draw heavy media attention, especially in conservative news outlets.
This could pull attention away from Biden's 2024 campaign messages on
the economy and other issues.For years, Republicans have accused Biden
of profiting while he was Barack Obama's vice president from 2009 to
2017 from his son Hunter Biden's foreign business ventures. The
impeachment inquiry is likely to focus on Hunter Biden's work as a
consultant during that era, though Republicans have until now failed to
provide evidence of wrongdoing by the president.
The White House called the inquiry "baseless" and Press Secretary Karine
Jean-Pierre said Republicans have presented no evidence that Biden did
anything wrong "because the president didn’t do anything wrong."
The U.S. Constitution empowers Congress to impeach federal officials
including the president for treason, bribery and "other high crimes and
misdemeanors." A president can be removed from office if the House
approves articles of impeachment by a simple majority and the Senate
votes by a two-thirds majority to convict after holding a trial.
While Republicans control the House, Democrats hold a majority in the
Senate, making a conviction highly unlikely.
Former President Donald Trump was twice impeached by the
then-Democratic-led House but was subsequently acquitted by the Senate.
He is the clear front-runner for the Republican nomination to face Biden
next year and has been pushing his allies in Congress to impeach his
rival.
'SERIOUS POLITICAL PROBLEM'
"This has the potential to be the beginning of a serious political
problem and devastating legal one," said Hogan Gidley, a former White
House official under Trump. "Starting an impeachment inquiry will
hopefully force the media to cover the mountains of evidence linking Joe
Biden to Hunter's business dealings in a way that the American people
haven't seen yet."
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U.S. President Joe Biden delivers remarks to service members, first
responders, and their families on the day of the 22nd anniversary of
the September 11, 2001 attacks on the World Trade Center, at Joint
Base Elmendorf-Richardson in Anchorage, Alaska, September 11, 2023.
REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein/File Photo
The White House and Democratic lawmakers have said there is no such
evidence and point out that Trump has been charged in four criminal
cases this year, with trials looming even as he campaigns to regain
the presidency.
The impeachment inquiry is unfolding at the same time that a special
counsel named by Biden-appointed U.S. Attorney General Merrick
Garland last month is investigating the president's son after
negotiations to revive a plea agreement by Hunter Biden on tax and
gun charges fell apart.
Biden's public approval ratings are weak, though the latest Reuters-Ipsos
tracking poll found it had ticked up to 42%, its highest level since
March. That is slightly above Trump and Obama at this stage in their
presidencies, Gallup data showed.
A Yahoo YouGov poll in August showed 45% of Americans believe the
Biden family is corrupt, while 53% believe the Trumps are.
Less than half believe Joe Biden did anything illegal and most
voters polled in June said Hunter's legal issues had little impact
on their plans to vote for or against his father.
McCarthy secured the House speakership in January after surviving a
revolt by far-right Republican lawmakers who have been pressuring
him to launch the impeachment inquiry.
McCarthy did that on Tuesday without a vote in the House. It was not
clear whether he would have had enough support to win such a vote,
considering the chamber's narrow 222-212 Republican majority.
The White House sent out a list of comments from Republican House
members saying evidence that Biden had done anything wrong had not
been found. It also released a previous McCarthy quote in which he
said a vote would be needed ahead of an impeachment inquiry
otherwise it "would create a process completely devoid of any merit
or legitimacy."
McCarthy said Republicans have turned up evidence of phone calls,
money transfers and other activity that "paints a picture of a
culture of corruption" in Biden's family. He did not cite any
evidence of misconduct by Joe Biden.
The Biden campaign plans to "aggressively push back on this stuff,"
said one campaign aide, by stressing that it is aimed at helping
Donald Trump’s campaign.
(Reporting by Jeff Mason and Steve Holland; Editing by Heather
Timmons, Will Dunham and David Gregorio)
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