US Senate seen swiftly ending impeachment of Biden's top border official
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[April 16, 2024]
By Richard Cowan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Republican-controlled U.S. House of
Representatives on Tuesday is expected to hand off its impeachment of
President Joe Biden's top border security official to the
Democratic-majority Senate, which is expected to bring it to a swift
end.
More than two months have passed since the House voted by a razor-thin
margin to impeach Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, who
Republicans accuse of failing to enforce U.S. border laws and lying to
Congress amid record-setting levels of illegal immigration.
Top Senate Democrat Chuck Schumer is expected to quickly bring an end to
the matter, which Democrats say is a politically motivated misuse of the
impeachment process, though doing so will draw protests from Republican
lawmakers.
Some lawmakers also argue the matter is a poor use of time as Congress
confronts global worries including the risk of the Israel-Gaza war
possibly turning into a regional conflict and Russia gaining ground in
its war against Ukraine.
Mayorkas, a former federal prosecutor, denies the House charges, Biden
is standing behind him, and even some Republicans have said they see no
illegal activities to back up the House allegations.
While many Republicans accuse Mayorkas of creating a "crisis" they say
jeopardizes national security due to record numbers of migrants arriving
at the southern U.S. border with Mexico, the House has been in no rush
to actually deliver its impeachment papers to the Senate.
Biden's election rival, Republican former President Donald Trump, has
made immigration a key focus of his campaign and earlier this year
helped torpedo a bipartisan Senate border bill that would have toughened
enforcement.
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U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, flanked by U.S.
President Joe Biden, speaks during the President's visit to the
U.S.-Mexico border in Brownsville, Texas, U.S., February 29, 2024.
REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque/File Photo
On Friday, he put forth a legislative proposal trying to link
conditions at the border to his longstanding false claim that his
2020 defeat to Biden was the result of fraud.
"Impeachment should never be used to settle a policy disagreement,"
Schumer said in a Monday speech. "That would set a horrible
precedent for the Congress."
The Senate will "address this issue as expeditiously as possible,"
Schumer added.
With some Senate Republicans fuming over Schumer's anticipated move
for a dismissal of the case without a trial, they have been staging
procedural hurdles against even routine actions that keep the
chamber operating efficiently.
Last Thursday, for only the seventh time in 35 years, they insisted
on a time-consuming roll-call vote to merely allow the Senate to
recess for a long weekend.
Republican Senator John Cornyn on Monday said talk circulating in
the Senate of dismissing the case was "alarming."
"Republicans will use every tool available to us to try to force a
full trial," he warned.
Mayorkas is only the second presidential Cabinet official facing
firing as the result of impeachment. The last time was in 1876.
(Reporting by Richard Cowan; editing by Scott Malone and Bill
Berkrot)
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