Live Updates: Pelosi Threatens Impeachment if
Trump Doesn’t Resign ‘Immediately’
The House could vote on impeachment next week.
President Trump will not attend President-elect Joe Biden’s inauguration. With
less than two weeks left of Mr. Trump’s presidency, a wave of resignations hits
his cabinet.
https://www.nytimes.com/live/2021/01/08/us/trump-biden
· The
man who stormed Pelosi’s office and a West Virginia lawmaker are among those
arrested.
· Here’s
what you need to know:
· Pelosi
threatens House could move to impeach Trump if he doesn’t resign ‘immediately.’
· Biden
fills out his team of economic officials as newly reported data shows job
losses for the first time since April.
· As
the White House slips into deeper crisis, Trump says he will not go to Biden’s
inauguration.
· Dominion
Voting Systems files defamation lawsuit against pro-Trump attorney Sidney
Powell.
· Betsy
DeVos pushes back at critics who claimed her resignation was a dodge from the
question of the 25th Amendment.
· Neera
Tanden, Biden’s pick to lead the Office of Management and Budget, releases her
financial disclosure.
· The
pipe bombs found at Democratic and Republican headquarters were said to contain
timing devices.
· A
letter of dissent from U.S. diplomats urged the State Department to ‘explicitly
denounce’ Trump.New
Pelosi threatens House could move to impeach
Trump if he doesn’t resign ‘immediately.’
“If the president does not leave office imminently and
willingly, the Congress will proceed with our action,” Speaker Nancy Pelosi
said in a letter on Friday.
Speaker
Nancy Pelosi of California threatened on Friday that the House could move to
impeach President Trump over his role in inciting a violent mob attack on the
Capitol if he did not resign “immediately,” appealing to Republicans to join
the push to force him from office.
In a letter
to members of the House, the speaker invoked the resignation of Richard M.
Nixon amid the Watergate scandal, when Republicans prevailed upon the president
to resign and avoid the ignominy of an impeachment, calling Mr. Trump’s actions
a “horrific assault on our democracy.”
“Today,
following the president’s dangerous and seditious acts, Republicans in Congress
need to follow that example and call on Trump to depart his office —
immediately,” she wrote. “If the president does not leave office imminently and
willingly, the Congress will proceed with our action.”
Ms. Pelosi
also said she had spoken with Gen. Mark A. Milley, the chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff, about “preventing an unstable president from initiating
military hostilities or accessing the launch codes.”
A spokesman
for General Milley, Col. Dave Butler, confirmed that the two had spoken and
said the general had “answered her questions regarding the process of nuclear
command authority.”
But some
Defense Department officials have privately expressed anger that political
leaders seemed to be trying to get the Pentagon to do the work of Congress and
Cabinet secretaries, who have legal options to remove a president.
Mr. Trump,
they noted, is still the commander in chief, and unless he is removed, the
military is bound to follow his lawful orders. While military officials can
refuse to carry out orders they view as illegal, they cannot proactively remove
the president from the chain of command. That would be a military coup, these
officials said.
The letter
from Ms. Pelosi came as momentum for impeachment was rapidly growing on Friday
among rank-and-file Democrats across the party’s ideological spectrum, and a
handful of Republicans offered potential support.
Representative
Katherine Clark of Massachusetts, the No. 4 Democrat, said that if Vice
President Mike Pence would not invoke the 25th Amendment to forcibly relieve
Mr. Trump of his duties, House Democrats were prepared to act on impeachment by
the middle of next week. But in a noon phone call, some others cautioned that
Democrats needed to pause to consider the implications, and Ms. Pelosi told her
colleagues she planned to speak to President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr. about
the matter later on Friday afternoon.
During an
appearance in Wilmington, Del., on Friday, Mr. Biden did not weigh in on plans
to impeach Mr. Trump saying, “What the Congress decides to do is for them to
decide.”
But Mr.
Biden had harsh words for Mr. Trump saying, “He has exceeded even my worst
notions about him. He’s been an embarrassment for the country.” And he added,
“He’s not worthy to hold the office.”
An aide to
Ms. Pelosi said that she still had not heard from Mr. Pence, despite putting
intense public pressure on him to act. But Mr. Pence was said to be opposed to
doing so, and she was making plans to move ahead.
Democrats
were rushing to begin the expedited proceeding two days after the president
rallied his supporters near the White House, urging them to go to the Capitol
to protest his election defeat, then continuing to stoke their grievances as
they stormed the edifice — with Mr. Pence and the entire Congress meeting
inside to formalize Mr. Biden’s victory — in a rampage that left an officer and
a member of the mob dead. (Three others died, including one woman who was
crushed in the crowd, and two others who had medical emergencies on the Capitol
grounds.)
The
prospect of forcing Mr. Trump from office in less than two weeks appeared
remote given the logistical and political challenges involved, given that a
two-thirds majority in the Senate would be required.
Just a day
after he voted twice to overturn Mr. Biden’s legitimate victory in key swing
states, Representative Kevin McCarthy of California, the Republican leader,
urged both parties to “lower the temperature” and said he would reach out to
Mr. Biden about uniting the country. Though he did not defend Mr. Trump, he
argued that seeking to remove him would not help.
“Impeaching
the president with just 12 days left in his term will only divide our country
more,” he said.
At least
some Republicans appeared newly open to the possibility, which could also
disqualify Mr. Trump from holding political office in the future.
Senator Ben
Sasse, Republican of Nebraska, a frequent critic of Mr. Trump, said he would
“definitely consider whatever articles they might move, because I believe the
president has disregarded his oath of office.”
“He swore
an oath to the American people to preserve, protect and defend the Constitution
— he acted against that,” Mr. Sasse said on CBS. “What he did was wicked.”
The House
is next scheduled to be in session on Monday, meaning that articles of
impeachment could not be introduced until then. On Friday, Ms. Clark said on
Twitter that Democrats were working to find “the quickest path to hold Trump
accountable,” but added that they faced “obstruction and attempts to delay us
by the G.O.P. defenders.”
— Nicholas Fandos and Luke Broadwater

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