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McCarthy shores up Republican support for Biden impeachment inquiry, as White House goes on offense

House Speaker Kevin McCarthy’s sudden decision to launch an impeachment inquiry into President Joe Biden appears to have won over even the most reluctant Republicans, and some GOP lawmakers are pushing for it to move quickly rather than drag into the 2024 election year

Lisa Mascaro,Stephen Groves,Kevin Freking
Wednesday 13 September 2023 17:05 BST
Biden Impeachment
Biden Impeachment (Copyright 2023 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)

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House Speaker Kevin McCarthy's sudden decision to launch an impeachment inquiry into President Joe Biden appears to have won over even the most reluctant Republicans, and some GOP lawmakers are pushing for it to move quickly rather than drag into the 2024 election year.

McCarthy opened and closed a private meeting Wednesday of House Republicans justifying his reasoning for the inquiry sought by former President Donald Trump, the party's frontrunner to challenge Biden next year.

The White House mobilized to fight allegations against the president regarding his son Hunter.

In a 14-page memo to news media leaders, the White House urged them to accurately report on “the Republicans' unprecedented, unfounded claims underlying an impeachment inquiry."

The moment is a politically pivotal one for the embattled Republican speaker McCarthy whose job is targeted Trump's right-flank allies mounting a daily effort to oust him.

In the inquiry, House Republicans are trying to link Biden to the business dealings of his son, Hunter Biden, and deflect attention away from Trump's own legal peril as the two men battle anew for the White House. Trump is the only president to be twice impeached — acquitted both times — and he is the first to face criminal charges in four separate indictments, including for trying to overturn the 2020 election he lost to Biden.

The sooner the better to go after Biden, some GOP lawmakers feel.

“I hope we can get it through as quickly as possible," said Rep. James Comer, R-Ky., the chairman of the Oversight Committee leading the impeachment inquiry.

On another front, McCarthy's decision to launch the impeachment inquiry appears to have done little to appease conservative lawmakers he needs to win over for his more immediate task: Persuading the GOP majority to pass the federal spending bills needed to avoid a government shutdown in just over two weeks.

Hard-right Republicans still want McCarthy to slash federal spending below the levels he and Biden agreed to as part of a budget deal earlier this year. And that stand risks a federal shutdown if they don't fund the government by Sept. 30 when current money runs out.

Democrats are expected to oppose those Republican efforts as well as fight Biden's impeachment.

Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., who led the first impeachment of Trump, said McCarthy's failure to bring the inquiry before the full House for a vote was an “an acknowledgement that he lacks the support in his conference to move forward.”

“He is beholden to the more extreme elements,” Schiff said as lawmakers returned to Washington late Tuesday. "It is yet another indication of the weakness in the speakership and the degree by which he is manipulated by Donald Trump.”

Yet moderate Republicans representing districts that Biden won in 2020 over Trump and who are most at risk in next year's election generally were supportive of McCarthy’s decision to launch the impeachment probe.

“I would have voted for it,” said Rep. Mike Garcia, R-Calif., about the impeachment inquiry.

Garcia said, “There’s smoke there so we have a requirement to go investigate that and see if there’s fire there.”

Rep. Nick LaLota of New York, another one of the Republicans from districts Biden won in 2022, said he wasn’t worried about any backlash. back home. "I think my constituents deserve some answers,” he said.

The freshmen lawmaker, along with other potential holdouts like Rep. Ken Buck, R-Colo., were offered private briefings from leadership this week in order to assuage any concerns.

Rep. Tom Cole, R-Okla. said McCarthy didn’t discuss a timeline for the impeachment inquiry.

“I don’t think there is a timeline because you don’t have a predetermined outcome," Cole said. "You do it until you think you’ve got the truth or you don’t and can’t go any further.”

On the government-funding issue, it's “really the number one thing we have to get done by the end of the month,” said Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., exiting Wednesday’s meeting.

McCarthy does not appear to have a viable plan to keep the government open, several lawmakers said.

One plan McCarthy is floating for averting a shutdown is to ask the House to approve as many spending bills as possible at the lower levels Republicans want and push them on the Senate, which is run by Democrats, in hopes of forcing a compromise.

But a massive House Republican bill to fund the Defense Department and related military affairs is scheduled for a vote this week, but it’s unclear if the House will be able to pass it.

The Republicans are trying to tack amendments to the Defense bill including those to eliminate funding for Ukraine and cut down the Pentagon’s diversity, equity and inclusions offices. One amendment would reduce Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin’s salary to $1.

Democrats are expected to vote against those as well as impeachment if the inquiry gets that far.

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Associated Press writer Farnoush Amiri contributed to this story.

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