Republican US House panel to push forward on impeaching border chief
Mayorkas
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[January 30, 2024]
By Ted Hesson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A Republican-led U.S. House of Representatives
panel on Tuesday plans to debate impeachment charges against Democratic
President Joe Biden's top border official, a near-unprecedented move
that comes as political tensions around immigration ramp up.
The House Homeland Security Committee will consider two articles of
impeachment targeting Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas.
The charges allege Mayorkas intentionally encouraged illegal immigration
with lax policies and violated public trust by making false statements
to Congress.
Democrats have dismissed the impeachment effort as a political ploy and
constitutional experts have said the policy criticisms outlined by
Republicans do not meet impeachment's high standard of misconduct. The
only Cabinet member ever to be impeached by the House was former
President Ulysses S. Grant's secretary of war William Belknap in 1876
following allegations of corruption. He was acquitted by the Senate.
Border security is a core issue for Republican voters concerned about a
record number of migrants illegally crossing the border since Biden took
office in 2021 and the party has made it a focus in the runup to the
Nov. 5 elections that will decide control of the White House and
Congress.
Republicans fault Biden for rolling back restrictive policies of
Republican former President Donald Trump, the leading candidate for his
party's nomination to challenge Biden.
Mayorkas - a former federal prosecutor - defended his immigration
enforcement record and commitment to government service in a letter set
to be sent on Tuesday to Representative Mark Green, the Republican
chairman of the Homeland committee.
"I assure you that your false accusations do not rattle me and do not
divert me from the law enforcement and broader public service mission to
which I have devoted most of my career and to which I remain devoted,"
Mayorkas wrote.
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Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas
takes his seat to testify before a Senate Appropriations Homeland
Security Subcommittee hearing on the department's budget request on
Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., May 26, 2021. REUTERS/Kevin
Lamarque/File Photo
The House is also holding an impeachment inquiry into Biden himself,
a move some Republican hardliners called for shortly after his 2020
election. Trump was impeached twice during his four years in office,
though each time Senate Republicans provided enough votes to acquit
him.
The Biden administration says it aims to create a more orderly and
humane immigration system, but the president has increasingly
toughened his rhetoric. On Friday, he embraced a yet-unreleased
Senate border deal that would create a sweeping authority to expel
migrants back to Mexico and said he would "shut down the border" if
the bill passed.
Trump has been pushing against that proposal, saying he does not
want to make a deal with Democrats in an election year.
House Republicans say impeachment is necessary since Mayorkas has
refused to detain migrants caught at the border and allowed too many
foreigners to enter legally through emergency "parole" programs.
Representative Bennie Thompson, the top Democrat on the Homeland
committee, said in a statement on Sunday that Republican charges
against Mayorkas lacked "even a shred of evidence" that warranted
impeachment.
(Reporting by Ted Hesson in Washington; Editing by Scott Malone and
Alistair Bell)
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