In American history, only five sitting presidents have ever faced formal impeachment probes. The first was Andrew Johnson in 1868. The second came more than a century later, when the House launched a probe into Richard Nixon ahead of his resignation.
Twenty-five years later, Bill Clinton faced a formal impeachment inquiry, followed by Donald Trump, who faced his first impeachment probe in 2019.
And now incumbent President Joe Biden has joined this very small club.
In the runup to the vote on whether to authorize this impeachment inquiry, there were still some hopes that cooler heads would prevail. If only four House Republicans acknowledged reality, the effort would’ve failed, and Congress could’ve moved onto more legitimate efforts.
But in the end, literally every member of the House GOP conference voted to proceed with this truly ridiculous gambit, indifferent to the fact that Republicans haven’t managed to find any credible evidence of wrongdoing against their Democratic target.
So, what happens now?
For the most part, those who’ve followed the process won’t notice a lot of changes. Republicans started the year looking for something incriminating to use against Biden, and House GOP leaders signed off an impeachment inquiry in September. In the months that followed, three Republican-led congressional panels — the House Oversight, Judiciary, and Ways and Means Committees — continued to search for evidence, to no avail.
In the coming weeks and months, those same three committees will continue to try to uncover something, anything, to justify their anti-Biden crusade — except this time, they’ll have a formal authorization vote that they believe will give their investigation added legal weight in pursuit of assorted documents and records.
Of course, given that the far-right lawmakers have already obtained voluminous documents and records, none of which has bolstered their conspiracy theories, the party probably shouldn’t get their hopes up.
In theory,…
Read the full article here