Revenue Agenda
  • Investing
  • Latest News
  • Editor’s Pick
  • Economy
  • Investing
  • Latest News
  • Editor’s Pick
  • Economy
No Result
View All Result
Revenue Agenda
No Result
View All Result
Home Investing

McCarthy denies pledge to bring vote on expunging Trump impeachments this month

by
July 21, 2023
in Investing
0
McCarthy denies pledge to bring vote on expunging Trump impeachments this month
0
SHARES
6
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) on Thursday denied promising Donald Trump a vote on expunging the former president’s two impeachments — a legislative maneuver that some House Republicans argue would carry little legal weight and could jeopardize the standing of some moderate GOP caucus members.

Politico reported earlier Thursday that McCarthy promised Trump a vote before the August recess to remain in the former president’s favor after McCarthy suggested Trump might not be the best Republican nominee in the 2024 presidential race.

Hours after the report published, however, McCarthy told NBC News that he had made no such deal.

“There’s no deal, but I’ve been very clear, from long before, when I voted against impeachments that they did it for purely political purposes,” McCarthy told NBC. “I support expungement, but there’s no deal out there.”

Last month, Reps. Elise Stefanik (N.Y.), the Republican conference chair, and Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) introduced resolutions to “expunge” Trump’s impeachment record, as if “such Articles of Impeachment never passed the full House of Representatives.” In statements announcing their resolutions, Stefanik and Greene accused Democrats of “weaponizing the power of impeachment” against Trump, a claim many of the president’s allies have made to defend him against efforts to investigate him and any potential wrongdoing.

House Majority Leader Rep. Steve Scalise (R-La.) said Thursday there is no timeline for when Stefanik and Greene’s expungement resolutions could be brought to a vote. The full Republican conference, he said, has not yet been brought into discussions on them.

“Obviously the bills are filed and we’ll see where the committee goes with it,” Scalise said. “We’re doing the appropriations bills next week. And then of course, when we return in September, we have a lot of other appropriations bills teed up. … So we’re going to be very busy.”

Multiple Republicans from swing districts approached McCarthy to implore him not to bring the expungement resolutions to the floor because it would put them in a politically perilous position, according to three people familiar with the conversations who were granted anonymity to discuss private talks. Freshman lawmakers, many of whom represent districts President Biden won in 2020, do not want to go on the record on a politically charged matter from the last Congress.

“The whole concept of looking backwards is ridiculous to most Americans. And what are we expunging? A public record that concluded in ‘not guilty,’” said one moderate House Republican, who was granted anonymity to speak candidly about how many in the conference feel. “This is an unnecessary vote meant to … feed an ego?”

Trump was impeached twice by the House, which then had a Democratic majority, during his four-year presidency. First in 2019, for withholding military aid from Ukraine in exchange for political favors, and in 2021, for inciting the Jan. 6 Capitol riot. He was acquitted in each of the Senate trials, but the impeachments by the House remain part of the historical record.

While McCarthy has long said he’s willing to take a look at expunging the impeachments — in January, he told reporters then that he “would understand why members would want to bring [expungement] forward” — some members of his caucus on Thursday questioned the purpose and practicality of making such a move.

Rep. Kelly Armstrong (R-N.D.), who voted against both of Trump’s impeachments, said he’d vote for an expungement if it came to the floor, but noted that expungements are for convictions.

“I have a hard time expunging something when there wasn’t a conviction,” Armstrong said.

Rep. Michael Lawler (R-N.Y.), a freshman lawmaker who was not in office during Trump’s impeachments, questioned whether there is anything to expunge.

“He was acquitted at trial, so I don’t really see the purpose in it,” Lawler said.

Still, legal and constitutional experts argue that expunging an impeachment is not something the Constitution allows.

Jonathan Turley, a constitutional law professor at George Washington University who was called on by Republicans to testify during Trump’s first impeachment, told The Washington Post that the Constitution has “no provision for expungement of an impeachment.”

“Impeachment is not like a constitutional DUI that can be expunged,” he said. “It became vested and settled with the majority vote on Jan. 13, 2021.”

Michael Gerhardt, a professor of jurisprudence at the University of North Carolina who also testified during Trump’s first impeachment, said that passing a resolution expunging the impeachments would have no practical effect other than appeasing Trump.

“Once the House impeaches somebody and the articles go to the Senate, the House loses its jurisdiction over that, it has no power whatsoever over that case again,” he said. “And so there’s no way legally for the House to retain jurisdiction over that matter — unless they impeach Trump [again].”

The arguments used in resolutions to expunge the impeachments, Gerhard argued, are based on a “complete misunderstanding of constitutional law.”

“And maybe that’s the point,” he said. “They’re not really doing constitutional law at all. They’re just making stuff up.”

Donald Sherman, the chief counsel and executive vice president at watchdog organization Citizens for Responsible Ethics in Washington, called conversations on expungement a “Faustian effort” that has “no legal or practical effect other than continuing to rewrite history in defense of Donald Trump’s corruption and insurrection.”

As she walked into McCarthy’s office on Thursday morning, Greene said there is no deal within the caucus to move on expunging Trump’s impeachments.

Leigh Ann Caldwell contributed to this report.

correction

A previous version of this article described Rep. Steve Scalise as House Majority Whip. He is House Majority Leader. The article has been updated.

This post appeared first on The Washington Post
Previous Post

DOJ will no longer intervene on behalf of Trump in Carroll defamation suit

Next Post

Senate Judiciary Committee adopts Supreme Court ethics bill

Next Post
Senate Judiciary Committee adopts Supreme Court ethics bill

Senate Judiciary Committee adopts Supreme Court ethics bill

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Top 10 Potash Countries by Production (Updated 2024)

Top 10 Potash Countries by Production (Updated 2024)

August 21, 2024
Top 10 Phosphate Countries by Production (Updated 2024)

Top 10 Phosphate Countries by Production (Updated 2024)

August 1, 2024
Top 10 Uranium-producing Countries (Updated 2024)

Top 10 Uranium-producing Countries (Updated 2024)

November 6, 2024
7 Biggest Lithium-mining Companies in 2024

7 Biggest Lithium-mining Companies in 2024

September 18, 2024
LKY Doubles Landholding Abutting MP Materials in Mojave Hub

LKY Doubles Landholding Abutting MP Materials in Mojave Hub

0
New Hampshire Gov. Sununu signs $15.2B ‘miracle’ budget into law

New Hampshire Gov. Sununu signs $15.2B ‘miracle’ budget into law

0

Pennsylvania House clears tax credits for new teachers, nurses, police officers

0
Evers signs bipartisan sales tax bill aimed at sparing Milwaukee from bankruptcy

Evers signs bipartisan sales tax bill aimed at sparing Milwaukee from bankruptcy

0
LKY Doubles Landholding Abutting MP Materials in Mojave Hub

LKY Doubles Landholding Abutting MP Materials in Mojave Hub

September 11, 2025
Clem Chambers: Gold’s Top Driver Now, Silver’s Coming Boom Phase

Clem Chambers: Gold’s Top Driver Now, Silver’s Coming Boom Phase

September 11, 2025
Mart Wolbert: Uranium Prices, Supply, Demand — What’s Next as Mindset Shifts

Mart Wolbert: Uranium Prices, Supply, Demand — What’s Next as Mindset Shifts

September 11, 2025
Heritage Mining Plans Aggressive Program at Zone 3 Extension Mega-Quartz Vein System at its Flagship Drayton-Black Lake Project

Heritage Mining Plans Aggressive Program at Zone 3 Extension Mega-Quartz Vein System at its Flagship Drayton-Black Lake Project

September 11, 2025
Enter Your Information Below To Receive Trading Ideas and Latest News

Error: Contact form not found.

Your information is secure and your privacy is protected. By opting in you agree to receive emails from us. Remember that you can opt-out any time, we hate spam too!

Recent News

LKY Doubles Landholding Abutting MP Materials in Mojave Hub

LKY Doubles Landholding Abutting MP Materials in Mojave Hub

September 11, 2025
Clem Chambers: Gold’s Top Driver Now, Silver’s Coming Boom Phase

Clem Chambers: Gold’s Top Driver Now, Silver’s Coming Boom Phase

September 11, 2025
Mart Wolbert: Uranium Prices, Supply, Demand — What’s Next as Mindset Shifts

Mart Wolbert: Uranium Prices, Supply, Demand — What’s Next as Mindset Shifts

September 11, 2025
Heritage Mining Plans Aggressive Program at Zone 3 Extension Mega-Quartz Vein System at its Flagship Drayton-Black Lake Project

Heritage Mining Plans Aggressive Program at Zone 3 Extension Mega-Quartz Vein System at its Flagship Drayton-Black Lake Project

September 11, 2025
  • About us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • About us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions

Copyright © 2025 revenueagenda.com | All Rights Reserved

No Result
View All Result
  • Investing
  • Latest News
  • Editor’s Pick
  • Economy

Copyright © 2025 revenueagenda.com | All Rights Reserved