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  • House Republicans authorize Joe Biden impeachment investigation in major escalation

    House Republicans authorize Joe Biden impeachment investigation in major escalation

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    WASHINGTON — House Republicans formally authorized their impeachment inquiry into President Joe Biden on Wednesday, taking their most significant step toward impeaching the president.

    The House voted along party lines by a vote of 221-212 to green light the inquiry.

    Republicans have alleged the president financially benefited from his family’s foreign business dealings, though they haven’t publicly released evidence backing up the claims.

    The votes comes after House Republicans accused the White House of stonewalling their investigation. Authorizing the inquiry, they say, could bolster their legal standing if their requests for information make it to court.

    The White House says it has cooperated fully with the investigation and provided plenty of evidence disputing House Republicans’ allegations.

    The impeachment inquiry “only proves how divorced from reality this sham investigation is,” said Ian Sams, White House spokesperson for Oversight and Investigations.

    House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., and GOP investigators leading the inquiry say it’s simply an investigation, and House Republicans have not predetermined whether to draft articles of impeachment against the president.

    “To fulfill our constitutional responsibility, we have to take the next step. We’re not making a political decision, it’s not. It’s a legal decision,” Johnson said at a weekly press conference on Tuesday. “We can’t prejudge the outcome. The Constitution does not permit us to do so. We have to follow the truth where it takes us.”

    House Speaker Mike Johnson of La., speaks to reporters following a meeting with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy at the Capitol, Tuesday, Dec. 12, 2023, in Washington.

    House Speaker Mike Johnson of La., speaks to reporters following a meeting with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy at the Capitol, Tuesday, Dec. 12, 2023, in Washington.

    But House Democrats have questioned the purpose of the investigation, given that Republicans have yet to turn up evidence directly tying Biden to his family’s business dealings.

    “What is the crime that Joe Biden is being accused of? They don’t have it,” Rep. Jamie Raskin, D-Md., said. Raskin is the top Democrat on the House Oversight Committee, which is one of three committees tasked with leading the investigation into Biden.

    The vote to authorize Republicans’ inquiry came the same day the president’s son, Hunter Biden was scheduled to testify in a Capitol Hill deposition behind closed doors.

    But Hunter Biden defied the subpoena, instead delivering impassioned remarks at a press conference early Wednesday morning. He defended his father and accused GOP investigators of weaponizing his substance use disorder to attack the president.

    “In the depths of my addiction, I was extremely irresponsible with my finances. But to suggest that is grounds for an impeachment inquiry is beyond the absurd. It’s shameless,” Hunter Biden said. “There is no evidence to support the allegations that my father was involved in my business because it did not happen.”

    Hunter Biden has demanded to testify in a public hearing, rather than behind closed doors. But the GOP investigators leading the probe are asking Hunter Biden to testify in a deposition first, claiming that Democrats would disrupt public proceedings. The House Oversight Committee has said it will begin proceedings to hold Hunter Biden in contempt of Congress.

    “We have specific questions for the president’s son. He does not get to dictate the terms of this subpoena,” House Oversight Committee Chair James Comer, R-Ky., said.

    Months ago, an impeachment inquiry looked like it was a tough sell for moderate and vulnerable House Republicans, most of them hailing from the 17 districts Biden won in the 2020 election.

    That lack of support was in part what led thenHouse Speaker Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., to open the probe in September without a formal vote. The California Republican criticized Democrats in 2019 for doing the same and vowed to have the approval of the lower chamber before opening the Biden impeachment inquiry.

    But even those vulnerable Republicans now agree that the White House has been uncooperative and think authorizing the probe will allow them to further investigate.

    “We have enough information and testimony and evidence right now to continue the process of the inquiry,” said Rep. Mike Garcia, R-Calif., a Biden-district GOP member.

    President Joe Biden speaks during a meeting of the National Infrastructure Advisory Council in the Indian Treaty Room on the White House campus, Wednesday, Dec. 13, 2023, in Washington.President Joe Biden speaks during a meeting of the National Infrastructure Advisory Council in the Indian Treaty Room on the White House campus, Wednesday, Dec. 13, 2023, in Washington.

    President Joe Biden speaks during a meeting of the National Infrastructure Advisory Council in the Indian Treaty Room on the White House campus, Wednesday, Dec. 13, 2023, in Washington.

    This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: House Republicans formalize impeachment inquiry into Joe Biden

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  • Jim Jordan outlines timeline for Joe Biden impeachment inquiry probe

    Jim Jordan outlines timeline for Joe Biden impeachment inquiry probe

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    Representative Jim Jordan, an Ohio Republican, said Sunday that the House will make a decision on whether to bring charges of impeachment against President Joe Biden by early next year.

    The House Oversight Committee is currently conducting an inquiry into the Biden family after then-House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, a Republican from California, announced the investigation in early September. At the center of the Biden impeachment inquiry is his alleged involvement in his son Hunter Biden‘s foreign business dealings. The White House has repeatedly denied that the president ever had any involvement in his son’s business.

    On Wednesday, Representative James Comer, chairman of the House Oversight Committee signed subpoenas for Hunter Biden and the president’s brother, James Biden, along with other members of their family and Rob Walker, a former business associate of the president’s son. Hunter Biden has been asked to appear for a deposition on December 13, James Biden is expected to attend a deposition on December 6 and Walker is scheduled for November 29.

    President Joe Biden speaks to autoworkers at the Community Complex Building on November 09, 2023 in Belvidere, Illinois. Representative Jim Jordan says that the House will make a decision to bring charges of impeachment against President Joe Biden by early next year.
    Scott Olson/Getty Images

    Representative Jordan, a member of the House Oversight Committee, outlined a timeline for the probe into Biden and his family during an interview on Fox NewsSunday Morning Features with host Maria Bartiromo.

    “I believe that we will get the depositions and the interviews done in this calendar year and then make a decision early next year whether there are actual, the evidence warrants going through articles of impeachment and moving to that stage of the investigation,” the Republican told Bartiromo.

    “We have a constitutional duty to do oversight. We’re now in the impeachment inquiry phase of our oversight duty. We’re driven by the facts. We’re driven by the evidence. Not by the politics like the Democrats are when they attacked President Trump,” Jordan said.

    The congressman, who is a close Trump ally, was referring to the former president’s two impeachments, in 2019 and then again in 2021. Trump also faces significant legal troubles, with multiple criminal indictments against him and a civil fraud trial underway in New York.

    Newsweek reached out to Jordan and the White House via email for comment.

    The White House has said that House Republicans have a political agenda against Biden.

    “With just over a week to go until House Republicans may again thrust the country into a harmful and chaotic government shutdown, the most extreme voices in their party like James Comer are trying to distract from their repeated failures to govern,” White House spokesman Ian Sams wrote in a memo addressing Wednesday’s subpoenas.

    “Instead of using the power of Congress to pursue a partisan political smear campaign against the President and his family, extreme House Republicans should do their jobs,” he added.

    The House Oversight Committee has spent months investigating the Biden family, issuing subpoenas for Hunter Biden’s and James Biden’s bank records and former associates of the president’s son to testify. According to House Republicans, the Biden family has cumulatively received more than $24 million from foreign nationals, including from countries like China, Russia, Ukraine, Romania and Kazakhstan, over a five-year period.

    “The House Oversight Committee has followed the money and built a record of evidence revealing how Joe Biden knew, was involved, and benefited from his family’s influence peddling schemes. Now, the House Oversight Committee is going to bring in members of the Biden family and their associates to question them on this record of evidence,” Comer said in a statement.

    The GOP congressman said that the records reveal how the Biden family benefited from the business dealings “to the detriment of U.S. interests.”

    The Biden administration and Democrats have said repeatedly that Republicans have not uncovered evidence of any criminality by the president. While Hunter Biden did earn substantial sums from foreign business deals, it’s not clear that any of these actions were illegal or that they benefited the president financially.

    Meanwhile, House Speaker Mike Johnson, a Louisiana Republican, received backlash from Make America Great Again (MAGA) supporters after he indicated in a closed-door meeting with House GOP moderates this week that there is insufficient evidence at the moment to move forward with formal impeachment proceedings.

    Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene, a Georgia Republican and staunch Trump supporter, mentioned previous House Speaker Kevin McCarthy’s support in launching the impeachment inquiry while criticizing Johnson.

    “After 8 R’s and all D’s ousted him, we found checks to Joe Biden and evidence of a massive money laundering scheme and now the new guy you are told is way better doesn’t want to impeach. Such progress,” Greene wrote in an X, formerly Twitter, post.