Republican House of Representatives Leader Kevin McCarthy took a significant step on Tuesday by launching an impeachment inquiry against President Joe Biden, setting the stage for a contentious and challenging endeavour to remove the Democratic president. This move follows the two impeachments of former President Donald Trump.
McCarthy’s decision is poised to lead to months of divisive House hearings, potentially diverting attention from crucial congressional efforts to prevent a government shutdown. Additionally, it could inject energy into the 2024 presidential race, where Trump aims to seek retribution for his 2020 election loss to Biden and regain the White House.
White House spokesperson Ian Sams responded by stating that Republicans have failed to produce any evidence of wrongdoing. He characterized this move as “extreme politics at its worst.”
Republicans, who currently hold a narrow majority in the House, have accused Biden of benefiting financially from his son Hunter Biden’s foreign business ventures during his tenure as vice president from 2009 to 2017, though they have not substantiated these claims.
Biden had previously ridiculed the idea of impeachment by Republicans. It’s worth noting that no U.S. president has ever been removed from office through impeachment, although the process, once rare, has become more frequent in recent times.
Many within McCarthy’s party expressed frustration when the Democratic-controlled House impeached Trump in 2019 and 2021, despite his subsequent acquittals in the Senate. Some staunch Republicans had even threatened to oust McCarthy from his House leadership position if he did not pursue an impeachment effort against Biden.
McCarthy stated, “I am instructing our House committees to initiate a formal impeachment inquiry into President Joe Biden. We will follow the evidence wherever it leads.”
A former business associate of Hunter Biden testified during a House hearing, alleging that Hunter Biden had peddled the “illusion” of access to power while his father was vice president, as per a transcript released last month.
McCarthy revealed that lawmakers from three committees would commence the gathering of evidence related to potential financial misconduct. Unlike Trump’s first impeachment in 2019, there will be no preliminary vote in the full House, although such a vote is not obligatory, it can enhance the credibility of the effort.
Democrats have framed the Republican impeachment discussions as a tactic to divert attention away from Trump’s legal challenges. Trump, who is seeking his party’s 2024 presidential nomination to run against Biden, faces four separate criminal indictments.
An impeachment against federal officials, including the president, can occur for charges such as treason, bribery, and “other high crimes and misdemeanors.” To remove a president from office, the House must approve articles of impeachment with a simple majority, and the Senate, consisting of 100 seats, must vote with a two-thirds majority to convict after conducting a trial.
It’s important to note that any attempt to impeach President Biden is highly unlikely to succeed, as even if the House votes in favor of impeachment (which remains uncertain with a narrow 222-212 vote margin), it would almost certainly fail in the Democratic-controlled Senate.