Several Republicans To Join Democrats In House Trump Impeachment Vote
The US House
of Representatives is expected to hold a vote to impeach President Donald Trump
over his role in last week's storming of Congress.
Democrats
accuse the president of encouraging his supporters to attack the Capitol
building. Five people died.
Members of
Mr Trump's Republican party say they will join Democrats to impeach him on
Wednesday, formally charging the president with inciting insurrection.
President
Trump has rejected any responsibility for the violence.
The riot
last Wednesday happened after Mr Trump told supporters at a rally in Washington
DC to "fight like hell" against the result of November's election.
As Democrats
hold a majority in the House, the vote is likely to pass. The case will then
head for the Senate, where a trial will be held to determine the president's
guilt.
A two-thirds
majority would be needed there to convict Mr Trump, meaning at least 17
Republicans would have to vote for conviction. As many as 20 Senate Republicans
are open to convicting the president, the New York Times reports.
The timeline
of when a trial could be held is not known but it is unlikely it could be
finished before Mr Trump leaves office on 20 January, when Joe Biden will be
sworn in as president.
The Senate
could also use an impeachment trial to block Mr Trump from ever running for
office again. He has indicated he plans to campaign for president in 2024.
Wednesday's
vote means that Mr Trump is likely to become the first US president ever to be
impeached twice.
In December
2019 he became the third president to be impeached over charges of
breaking the law by asking Ukraine to investigate Mr Biden to boost his own
chances of re-election. The Senate cleared him.
The third
most senior Republican in the House, Liz Cheney, vowed to back impeachment,
saying Mr Trump had "summoned this mob, assembled the mob, and lit the
flame of this attack", referring to last week's riot.
"There
has never been a greater betrayal by a president of the United States of his
office and his oath to the Constitution," said the Wyoming representative,
daughter of former Vice-President Dick Cheney.
At least
four other Republican House members said they would also vote for impeachment.
House
Republican leader Kevin McCarthy, a Trump ally who has said he opposes impeachment,
decided not to ask rank-and-file members of the party to vote against the
measure, US media reported.
According to
the New York Times, Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell told confidants he
was pleased Democrats wanted to impeach the president because he believed it
would help rid the Republican party of Mr Trump.
With just a
week left in his term, it now appears all but certain that Donald Trump will
become the first president to be impeached twice.
Unlike his
first go through the process, this vote will have the support of at least a
handful of Republicans - including Liz Cheney, a member of the party's House
leadership team. There is also, unlike January 2020, a chance the Senate has
enough votes to successfully convict the president. Majority Leader Mitch
McConnell's recent signals of approval are evidence of that.
Of course,
the primary consequence of Senate conviction - removal from office - seems of
limited relevance with so little time left in the Trump presidency. Democrats,
however, view impeachment as a formal way of marking their outrage at the
president's behaviour, not just last week, but during his months of challenging
and undermining November's election results.
A successful
conviction could also result in Trump's being banned from ever holding federal
public office again and stripped of the privileges enjoyed by ex-presidents.
That
prospect alone, in the minds of Democrats (and, perhaps, some Republicans ready
to break with Trumpism), makes impeachment worth the effort.
Speaking on
Tuesday, Mr Trump showed no contrition for remarks he made to supporters before
the violence, when he also repeated unsubstantiated claims of voter fraud.
"What I
said was totally appropriate," Mr Trump told reporters. "I want no
violence."
He also
said: "This impeachment is causing tremendous anger... and it's really a
terrible thing that they're doing," adding that the "real
problem" was rhetoric used by Democrats during Black Lives Matter protests
and violence last year.
In a
separate development, YouTube said it had suspended Mr Trump's channel as
it violated policies for inciting violence. The president's accounts on
Twitter and Facebook have already been removed.
On Tuesday
evening, House Republican Brian Fitzpatrick of Pennsylvania introduced a
resolution to censure Mr Trump, a congressional rebuke less severe than
impeachment.
The measure
accuses Mr Trump of "trying to unlawfully overturn" the results of
the election and of having "imperilled a coequal branch of
Government".
Earlier, the
House passed a resolution by 223-205 votes calling on Vice-President Mike Pence
to help oust Mr Trump using the 25th Amendment, which would allow the
cabinet to remove the president if he is deemed unable to discharge his
duties.
But Mr Pence
had already rejected the Democrats' resolution, saying in a letter to House
Speaker Nancy Pelosi: "Under our Constitution, the 25th Amendment is not a
means of punishment or usurpation."
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