House moves to force Trump out, vowing impeachment if Pence won’t act
By Nicholas Fandos, Peter Baker and Maggie Haberman
WASHINGTON — The House moved on two fronts Sunday (10) to try to force President Donald Trump from office, escalating pressure on the vice president to strip him of power and committing to quickly begin impeachment proceedings against him for inciting a mob that violently attacked the seat of American government.
In a letter to colleagues, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi of California said the House would move forward Monday (11) with a resolution calling on Vice President Mike Pence and the Cabinet to invoke the 25th Amendment, and wrest the powers of the presidency. She called on Pence to respond “within 24 hours” and indicated she expected a Tuesday (12) vote on the resolution.
Next, she said, the House would bring an impeachment case to the floor. Though she did not specify how quickly it would move, leading Democrats have suggested they could press forward on a remarkably quick timetable, charging Trump by midweek with “high crimes and misdemeanours”.
“In protecting our Constitution and our democracy, we will act with urgency, because this president represents an imminent threat to both,” she wrote. “As the days go by, the horror of the ongoing assault on our democracy perpetrated by this president is intensified and so is the immediate need for action.”
Pelosi’s actions effectively gave Pence, who is said to be opposed to the idea, an ultimatum: use his power under the Constitution to force Trump out by declaring him unable to discharge his duties, or make him the first president in American history to be impeached twice.
Far from capitulating, Trump made plans to proceed as if the last five earth-shattering days had simply not happened at all. But momentum in Washington was shifting decisively against him.
More than 210 of the 222 Democrats in the House — nearly a majority — had already signed on to an impeachment resolution by Sunday afternoon, registering support for a measure that asserted that Trump would “remain a threat to national security, democracy, and the Constitution” if he was not removed in the final 10 days of his term. A second Republican senator, Patrick Toomey of Pennsylvania, said he should resign immediately, joining Lisa Murkowski of Alaska. And a Republican House member hinted more clearly than before that he could vote to impeach, even as he cautioned that it could backfire and further galvanize Trump’s supporters.
With few Democrats hopeful Pence would act, Rep. James E. Clyburn of South Carolina, the party’s No. 3, said the House could vote to impeach Trump by Wednesday (13), one week before Inauguration Day. Lawmakers were put on notice to return to Washington, and their leaders consulted with the Federal Air Marshal Service and police on how to safely move them back into a Capitol that was ransacked in a shocking security failure less than a week ago.
“If we are the people’s house, let’s do the people’s work and let’s vote to impeach this president,” Clyburn said on ‘Fox News Sunday’. “The Senate will decide later what to do with that — an impeachment.”
Clyburn argued in favour of delaying the start of any Senate trial for several months to allow President-elect Joe Biden to take office without the cloud of an all-consuming impeachment drama. It would be nearly impossible to start a trial before Jan. 20, and delaying it further would allow the House to deliver a stinging indictment of the president without impeding Biden’s ability to form a Cabinet and confront the spiralling coronavirus crisis.
“Let’s give President-elect Biden the 100 days he needs to get his agenda off and running,” Clyburn, an influential ally of Biden, said in another interview on CNN.
The uncertainty underscored how little precedent those seeking to contain the president had to guide them. No president has been impeached in the final days of his term, or with the prospect of a trial after he leaves office — and certainly not just days after lawmakers themselves were attacked.
A two-thirds majority is needed to convict and remove a president in the Senate. But if he were found guilty, a simple majority of the Senate could then bar Trump from holding office in the future.
Biden has tried to keep a distance from the impeachment issue. He spoke privately Friday (8) with Pelosi and Sen. Chuck Schumer of New York, the top Senate Democrat. But publicly he has said that the decision rests with Congress, and that he intends to remain focused on the work of taking over the White House and the government’s coronavirus response.
“In 10 days, we move forward and rebuild — together,” Biden wrote on Twitter on Sunday.
At the White House, Trump remained out of sight for a fourth straight day and made no public comment on either the assault on the Capitol or the brewing impeachment threat. The White House announced instead that he would travel Tuesday to Alamo, Texas, to promote his border wall as part of a series of activities highlighting what he sees as the achievements of the past four years.
Otherwise, the basic work of the final days of a presidential term had essentially been halted. A slew of pardons that were under discussion were put on hold after the riot, according to people informed about the deliberations. And around the White House, the president’s advisers hoped he would let go of giving himself a pardon, saying it would look terrible given what had taken place.
Among those said to be furious with the president was Melania Trump, the first lady. While she has stayed quiet publicly, people close to the situation said she was upset with her husband for what had taken place, as well as his decision not to attend Biden’s inauguration.
Other than a video message he posted Thursday night, Trump has said nothing about the attack since its conclusion and taken no responsibility for it, nor has he said anything publicly about the US Capitol Police officer killed by the mob. Only after much criticism did he order flags lowered to half-staff at the White House and other federal facilities Sunday in honour of the officer and another who Capitol Police said had died off-duty days after responding to the riot at the Capitol.
In past furores, any anger within his own party tended to fade with passing days, but this time, the disenchantment among many Republicans appeared to be hardening, particularly with new videos emerging, including one showing the mob dragging a police officer down the steps outside the Capitol and beating him.
“The more time, images, and stories removed from Wednesday, the worse it gets,” Josh Holmes, a longtime adviser to Sen. Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the Republican leader, wrote on Twitter. “If you’re not in a white hot rage over what happened by now you’re not paying attention.”
It was that fury driving Democrats forward with stunning speed.
The four-page impeachment article that had gained overwhelming support among Democrats — written by Reps. David Cicilline of Rhode Island, Jamie Raskin of Maryland and Ted Lieu of California — was narrowly tailored to Trump’s role “wilfully inciting violence against the government of the United States.” Democrats involved in the process said they had drafted the text with input from some Republicans, though they declined to name them.
More details emerged Sunday about Trump’s role, which could shape the debate about impeachment. The president was deeply involved in the planning of the rally Wednesday (6) where he exhorted thousands of followers to march to the Capitol and demonstrate strength. He personally helped select who would speak and what music would play, according to people briefed on how the event came together.
The president had been excited about the event for days, more focused on that and trying to overturn the Electoral College vote count than anything else. Heading into Wednesday, some advisers privately said Trump appeared to believe that Pence could legally hand him the election in his role presiding over the vote count.
At one point, Trump told the vice president that he had spoken with Mark Martin, the former chief justice of the North Carolina Supreme Court, who he said had told him that Pence had that power. Pence had assured Trump that he did not. Trump made the vice president defend his rationale in a meeting with lawyers whom Rudy Giuliani had helped line up.
Both parties conceded they had no clear picture of how many Republican senators might ultimately vote to convict Trump.
Toomey said Trump had “spiralled down into a kind of madness” since the election and had effectively “disqualified himself” from ever running for office again. But a day after he called Trump’s conduct “impeachable”, Toomey argued an impeachment would be impractical with Trump already headed for the exit.
“I think the best way for our country, Chuck, is for the president to resign and go away as soon as possible,” he told host Chuck Todd on NBC’s “Meet the Press.” “I acknowledge that may not be likely, but I think that would be best.”
-New York Times