August is a month when things usually get a little, well, weird in the realm of national politics. What would normally be nonstories can suddenly blow up in the vacuum of the congressional recess and general lack of political news. But the opposite seems to be happening for House Republicans, who have spent their brief time in power desperately trying to stretch the most minor issues into full-blown scandals. It seems oddly fitting that when it comes to impeaching President Joe Biden or members of his Cabinet, cooler GOP heads are prevailing this August — at least for now.
MAGA Republicans have been trying to avenge former President Donald Trump’s impeachments for years now. For a while, it seemed like the metaphorical bloodlust could be satiated by targeting Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas. But Speaker Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., has fanned the flames in recent weeks, raising the prospect of opening an impeachment inquiry into Attorney General Merrick Garland. And while the House leadership team managed to punt on a resolution impeaching Biden earlier this summer, House Oversight Committee Chair James Comer, R-Ky., and other top Republicans have teased the prospect of an impeachment inquiry into the president’s alleged business dealings with his son Hunter.
MAGA Republicans have been trying to avenge former President Donald Trump’s impeachments for years now.
This feels like an important time to highlight the notable lack of evidence that anything the president or his team have done would clear the Constitution’s bar of “high crimes and misdemeanors” for impeachment. Republicans have put on months of hearings that have led nowhere and produced a string of supposed star witnesses whose testimony has fallen flat. In sum, Comer and company have yet to show any sort of wrongdoing on Biden’s part, let alone impeachable offenses. The same is true for Garland and Mayorkas.
So, while it’s correct to say that the use of impeachment as a rhetorical device has increased in recent years, a recent article from The New York Times is patently misleading. The article frames the two impeachments of Trump as a consequence of Republicans impeaching President Bill Clinton in 1998. Thus, the interest in impeachment from Republicans is presented as the natural response to Democrats impeaching Trump: “Tit for tat is the coin of the congressional realm.”
The truth is that Clinton’s impeachment and the political fallout it produced was, if anything, a hinderance to launching Trump’s first impeachment. Then-Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., saw the backlash the Clinton impeachment produced as a warning, leaving her reluctant to start the process against Trump. The momentum only picked up once evidence of actual malfeasance was uncovered and, notably, it was a push from Democrats in vulnerable districts that gave Pelosi the political wiggle room to change course, allowing an impeachment push to move forward in September 2019. Trump’s second impeachment was preceded by an eye-popping spasm of violence broadcast around the world, and passed days after the Capitol was attacked by a pro-Trump mob.








