Tag: IMPEACHMENT

  • Doug Collins, a Key Trump Impeachment Player, Will Face Senators as V.A. Pick


    Former Representative Doug Collins, an Air Force Reserve chaplain who defended President Trump during his first impeachment investigation, is set to testify in a confirmation hearing on Tuesday morning after being chosen by Mr. Trump to lead the Veterans Affairs Department.

    Mr. Collins, a Navy veteran and fast-talking former pastor, is set to appear before the Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committee as the first potential cabinet official to face confirmation hearings after Mr. Trump took office. His hearing was delayed by a week because of an incomplete background check.

    Like many of Mr. Trump’s other cabinet selections, including Pete Hegseth, his nominee to oversee the Defense Department, Mr. Collins reflects the new president’s priorities in filling out agency leadership for his second term, with personal loyalty central to each selection.

    Mr. Collins is not expected to face a difficult confirmation fight, in part because of the bipartisan and apolitical nature of much of the department’s work managing a sprawling health system and veterans’ benefits.

    Dr. David Shulkin, the former V.A. secretary who was the lone Obama administration holdover in Mr. Trump’s first-term cabinet before being pushed out of the job, said in an interview that Mr. Collins would most likely need to focus on the same priorities as his predecessor, Denis McDonough.

    “Because the issues the V.A. deals with are systemic and complex, and unfortunately the same ones that were there when the last secretary was in,” Dr. Shulkin said.

    Mr. Collins is in some ways an unusual choice. Previous V.A. secretaries have had long military careers, or held senior roles at the Defense Department or the Veterans Affairs Department itself. In the House, Mr. Collins did not serve on the Veterans’ Affairs or Armed Services Committees.

    As a member of the Air Force Reserve, Mr. Collins deployed to Iraq, visiting with injured service members at Balad Air Base.

    Mr. Trump’s experience fending off impeachment inquiries during and after his first term heavily influenced how he chose political allies. Other House Republicans who defended him in the first impeachment inquiry were also chosen to serve in his cabinet, including Representative Elise Stefanik of New York and former Representatives Lee Zeldin of New York and John Ratcliffe of Texas.

    “You have been so great,” Mr. Trump told Mr. Collins in a packed room of supporters at the White House after the Senate voted to acquit him.

    In 2019, before the acquittal, Mr. Trump pressed Gov. Brian Kemp of Georgia to name Mr. Collins to the Senate seat vacated by Johnny Isakson. Mr. Kemp instead named Kelly Loeffler, a businesswoman. Mr. Collins ran against, and lost to, Ms. Loeffler in a special election for her seat in 2020. Mr. Trump chose Ms. Loeffler last month to lead the Small Business Administration.

    Even with his zeal to protect Mr. Trump during his first term, Mr. Collins nurtured a reputation for working with Democrats, coauthoring criminal justice reform legislation with Representative Hakeem Jeffries of New York, now the top House Democrat.

    Some of Mr. Collins’s duties at the Veterans Affairs Department may involve divisive health care policies. A second Trump administration may seek to reverse a Biden administration rule allowing the department to provide abortions to veterans when a pregnancy resulted from rape or incest, or when the life of a pregnant woman is at risk.

    But much of Mr. Collins’s portfolio will likely involve seemingly intractable problems that have trailed past secretaries from Republican and Democratic administrations, including behavioral health access.

    A report published by the department last month showed that there were more than 6,400 suicides among veterans in 2022, fewer than 12 of the 14 prior years but a slight increase from the year before. The number of homeless veterans dropped to a record low under President Joseph R. Biden Jr., but remained above 32,000 between January 2023 and January 2024.

    Dr. Shulkin said that atop Mr. Collins’s list would be a budget deficit that has caused the department to slow hiring. That has risked its ability to care for the nearly 900,000 veterans brought into the system through legislation signed by Mr. Biden that expanded medical benefits for veterans exposed to toxins from burning pits of trash on military bases.

    “There’s a big backlog of demands and needs,” Dr. Shulkin said.

    Like past secretaries, Mr. Collins will also likely need to tend to aging V.A. facilities with outdated medical equipment and record-keeping systems. The department oversees roughly 1,200 sites across the country that serve almost nine million veterans.

    Mr. Collins on Tuesday is likely to be pressed about his views of private medical care for veterans. During Mr. Trump’s first term, the department began allowing veterans to seek medical care outside of traditional V.A. hospitals, an effort intended to give more flexibility to patients.

    But critics have said that continuing to push veterans out of the V.A. system could compromise the integrity of its own health care.

    “There’s this grass is greener on the other side of the field sensibility to it,” Joe Plenzler, a retired Marine Corps officer and veterans’ advocate, said. “What the data show is that when veterans get care at the V.A., they’re happier with it and get better-quality care.”

    Were Mr. Collins to continue the first Trump administration’s push, Mr. Plenzler said, it could “turn the V.A. into an insurance company.”



    In a dramatic turn of events, Doug Collins, a key player in President Trump’s impeachment proceedings, is set to face senators once again, but this time in a different role – as the nominee for the position of Veterans Affairs (V.A.) Secretary.

    Collins, a former Republican congressman from Georgia, gained national attention for his vocal defense of President Trump during the impeachment hearings in the House of Representatives. Now, he will have the opportunity to showcase his leadership abilities and policy priorities as he goes through the confirmation process in the Senate.

    As a staunch supporter of the president, Collins is likely to face tough questions from Democratic senators about his views on important V.A. issues such as healthcare for veterans, mental health services, and accountability within the department. However, his experience in Congress and his track record of advocating for veterans’ rights could work in his favor during the confirmation process.

    The outcome of Collins’ nomination will undoubtedly have significant implications for the V.A. and the millions of veterans who rely on its services. Stay tuned for updates on this developing story as Collins prepares to make his case to the Senate.

    Tags:

    • Doug Collins
    • Trump impeachment
    • Senate
    • V.A. pick
    • Doug Collins impeachment role
    • Senate confirmation
    • Trump administration
    • Impeachment trial
    • Senate hearing
    • V.A. nominee
    • Trump impeachment player
    • Doug Collins Senate appearance

    #Doug #Collins #Key #Trump #Impeachment #Player #Face #Senators #V.A #Pick

  • Comer requests Trump DOJ prosecute James Biden for making ‘false statements’ during impeachment inquiry


    EXCLUSIVE: House Oversight Committee Chair James Comer is requesting President-elect Trump’s Justice Department investigate and prosecute President Biden’s brother, James Biden, for allegedly making false statements to Congress, Fox News Digital has learned. 

    Fox News Digital exclusively obtained a letter that Comer, R-Ky., sent to Trump’s nominee for attorney general, Pam Bondi, encouraging the DOJ to “hold James Biden accountable for lying to Congress to protect his brother, the soon-to-be-former President Biden.” 

    House Republicans in June sent criminal referrals for James Biden and Hunter Biden to the Justice Department recommending they be charged with making false statements to Congress about “key aspects” of the impeachment inquiry of President Biden. 

    James Biden, brother of President Biden, arrives for a deposition before the House Oversight and Judiciary Committees on President Biden’s impeachment inquiry in Washington, D.C., on Feb. 21, 2024. (Jim Watson)

    HOUSE REPUBLICANS REFER HUNTER BIDEN, JAMES BIDEN FOR CRIMINAL PROSECUTION AMID IMPEACHMENT INQUIRY

    Specifically, Comer at the time said the alleged false statements implicated President Biden’s “knowledge and role in his family’s influence-peddling schemes” and that they appeared “to be a calculated effort to shield Joe Biden from the impeachment inquiry.” 

    Comer, along with House Judiciary Committee Chair Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, and Ways & Means Committee Chair Jason Smith, R-Mo., led the impeachment inquiry into President Biden and found that he engaged in “impeachable conduct,” “abused his office” and “defrauded the United States to enrich his family.” 

    FLASHBACK: HUNTER BIDEN BUSINESS ASSOCIATE’S TEXT MESSAGES INDICATE MEETING WITH JOE BIDEN

    Comer, in his letter to Bondi this week, pointed to Biden’s “full and unconditional pardon” for his son, Hunter Biden. 

    “President Biden’s latest scheme to cover his family’s grift cements his legacy as leading the most corrupt political family to attain the presidency in American history,” Comer wrote to Bondi. “But it also appears incomplete. President Biden has displayed to the American people that his son is beyond accountability in a court of law for his crimes.” 

    FLASHBACK: HUNTER BIDEN IN 2017 SENT ‘BEST WISHES’ FROM ‘ENTIRE BIDEN FAMILY’ TO CHINA FIRM CHAIRMAN, REQUESTED $10M WIRE

    But Comer said he wanted to “remind incoming Department of Justice leadership of Hunter Biden’s main accomplice in his influence peddling schemes (aside from Joe Biden himself), whom the House Committees on Oversight, the Judiciary, and Ways and Means previously identified to Attorney General Merrick Garland as having misled Congress regarding Joe Biden’s participation in his family’s influence peddling and deserving of prosecution under federal law: James Biden, the President’s younger brother.” 

    Rep. James Comer, R-Ky. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite/File)

    Comer reminded Bondi that he and House Republicans referred James Biden to the Justice Department for criminal prosecution, saying the president’s brother “made materially false statements to the Oversight and Judiciary Committees.” 

    BIDEN COMMITTED ‘IMPEACHABLE CONDUCT,’ ‘DEFRAUDED UNITED STATES TO ENRICH HIS FAMILY’: HOUSE GOP REPORT

    “The nature of both his and Hunter Biden’s false statements is not lost on the Committees: every instance implicates Joe Biden’s knowledge of and role in his family’s influence peddling,” Comer wrote. “James Biden’s denial of Joe Biden’s meeting with James Biden, Hunter Biden, and Hunter Biden’s business associate for a Chinese transaction, Tony Bobulinski — despite evidence being placed in front of him and being given multiple opportunities to amend his response — appears to be a clumsy attempt to protect Joe Biden from the reality that Joe Biden has indeed met with his family’s business associates.” 

    James and Joe Biden (AP | Getty Images)

    JOE BIDEN RECEIVED $40K IN ‘LAUNDERED CHINA MONEY’ FROM BROTHER IN 2017, COMER SAYS

    Comer and House Republicans in June said James Biden “stated unequivocally during his transcribed interview that Joe Biden did not meet with Mr. Tony Bobulinski, a business associate of James and Hunter Biden, in 2017 while pursuing a deal with a Chinese entity, CEFC China Energy.”

    “Specifically, James Biden stated he did not attend a meeting with Joe Biden, Hunter Biden, and Tony Bobulinski on May 2, 2017 at the Beverly Hilton Hotel,” Comer, Jordan and Smith said in their criminal referral to Attorney General Merrick Garland last year. “These statements were contradicted not only by Mr. Bobulinski, but Hunter Biden.”

    They also noted that Bobulinski “produced text messages that establish the events leading up to and immediately following his meeting with Joe Biden on May 2, 2017.” 

    In his letter to Bondi, Comer blasted President Biden, claiming he obstructed the committee’s impeachment inquiry and that in itself was “impeachable conduct.” 

    SPECIAL COUNSEL WEISS BLASTS BIDEN IN FINAL HUNTER PROSECUTION REPORT

    “The legacy President Biden leaves behind is having led the most dishonest and corrupt administration in American history,” Comer wrote. 

    Biden, last month, made the decision to grant his son a “Full and Unconditional Pardon” covering nearly 11 years of conduct, including conduct related to both convictions Special Counsel David Weiss obtained.

    Hunter Biden leaves federal court, June 3, 2024, in Wilmington, Del. (AP Photo/Matt Slocum)

    Hunter Biden was found guilty of three felony firearm offenses stemming from Weiss’ investigation. The first son was also charged with federal tax crimes regarding the failure to pay at least $1.4 million in taxes. Before his trial, Hunter Biden entered a surprise guilty plea. 

    Weiss released his highly anticipated report on his yearslong investigation into Hunter Biden last week and blasted Biden for having “unfairly” maligned Justice Department public servants and casting doubt on the U.S. justice system with “wrong” claims that his probe was political. 

    “President Biden repeatedly told—or used White House personnel to tell—the American people he would not pardon his son. That was a lie,” Comer wrote to Bondi. “President Biden continues to lie, now falsely claiming ‘[n]o reasonable person who looks at the facts of Hunter’s cases can reach any other conclusion than Hunter was singled out only because he is my son – and that is wrong.’” 

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    Comer added, “Though President Biden’s saccharine (and wholly ironic) rantings of political persecution and weaponized prosecution of Hunter Biden are specious, they are inapplicable to the non-prosecution of his brother, James Biden, who has lied to the United States Congress and has faced no accountability to date.” 

    “I write to encourage the Department under your leadership to hold James Biden accountable for lying to Congress to protect his brother, the soon-to-be-former President Biden,” Comer continued. “No one should be above the law, regardless of his last name.” 



    In a recent development, Senator Tom Comer has formally requested the Trump Department of Justice to prosecute James Biden for allegedly making false statements during the impeachment inquiry. Comer asserts that Biden’s testimony was misleading and may have obstructed justice.

    The senator has stated that it is vital for the DOJ to hold individuals accountable for their actions, especially when it comes to providing false information under oath. He emphasized the importance of upholding the rule of law and ensuring that all individuals are held to the same standard.

    This request comes amidst growing scrutiny over the impeachment inquiry and the testimonies provided by key individuals. Comer’s call for prosecution signals a heightened focus on the integrity of the proceedings and the need for transparency.

    As the investigation unfolds, it remains to be seen whether the DOJ will take action against James Biden. Stay tuned for further updates on this developing story.

    Tags:

    1. Comer
    2. Trump DOJ
    3. James Biden
    4. False statements
    5. Impeachment inquiry
    6. Prosecution
    7. Legal action
    8. Government accountability
    9. Politically motivated accusations
    10. Justice served

    #Comer #requests #Trump #DOJ #prosecute #James #Biden #making #false #statements #impeachment #inquiry

  • South Korea’s acting President Han Duck-soo faces impeachment

    South Korea’s acting President Han Duck-soo faces impeachment


    SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — South Korea’s opposition-controlled National Assembly voted Friday to impeach acting President Han Duck-soo despite vehement protests by governing party lawmakers, further deepening the country’s political crisis set off by President Yoon Suk Yeol’s stunning imposition of martial law and ensuing impeachment.

    Han’s impeachment means he will be stripped of the powers and duties of the president until the Constitutional Court decides whether to dismiss or reinstate him. The court is already reviewing whether to uphold Yoon’s earlier impeachment. The impeachments of the country’s top two officials worsen its political turmoil, deepen its economic uncertainty and hurt its international image.

    The single-chamber National Assembly passed Han’s impeachment motion with a 192-0 vote. Lawmakers with the governing People Power Party boycotted the vote and gathered around the podium where assembly Speaker Woo Won Shik was seated and shouted that the vote was “invalid” and demanded Woo’s resignation. No violence or injuries were reported.

    The PPP lawmakers protested after Woo called for a vote on Han’s impeachment motion after announcing its passage required a simple majority in the 300-memer assembly, not a two-thirds majority as claimed by the PPP. Most South Korean officials can be impeached by the National Assembly with a simple majority vote, but a president’s impeachment needs the support of two-thirds. There are no specific laws on the impeachment of an acting president.

    Han’s powers will be officially suspended when copies of his impeachment document are delivered to him and the Constitutional Court. The deputy prime minister and finance minister, Choi Sang-mok, will take over.

    Over 50 countries go to the polls in 2024

    Han, who was appointed prime minister by Yoon, became acting president after Yoon, a conservative, was impeached by the National Assembly about two weeks ago over his short-lived Dec. 3 imposition of martial law. Han quickly clashed with the main liberal opposition Democratic Party as he pushed back against opposition-led efforts to fill three vacant seats on the Constitutional Court, establish an independent investigation into Yoon’s martial law decree and legislate pro-farmer bills.

    At the heart of the fighting is the Democratic Party’s demand that Han approve the assembly’s nominations of three new Constitutional Court justices to restore its full nine-member bench ahead of its ruling on Yoon’s impeachment. That’s a politically sensitive issue because a court decision to dismiss Yoon as president needs support from at least six justices, and adding more justices will likely increase the prospects for Yoon’s ouster. Yoon’s political allies in the governing People Power Party oppose the appointment of the three justices, saying Han shouldn’t exercise the presidential authority to make the appointments while Yoon has yet to be formally removed from office.

    On Thursday, Han said he wouldn’t appoint the justices without bipartisan consent. The Democratic Party, which holds a majority in the assembly, submitted an impeachment motion against Han and passed bills calling for the appointment of three justices.

    South Korean investigative agencies are probing whether Yoon committed rebellion and abuse of power with his marital law decree. His defense minister, police chief and several other senior military commanders have already been arrested over the deployment of troops and police officers to the National Assembly, which prompted a dramatic standoff that ended when lawmakers managed to enter the chamber and voted unanimously to overrule Yoon’s decree.





    South Korea’s acting President Han Duck-soo faces impeachment

    Amidst political turmoil, South Korea’s acting President Han Duck-soo is facing impeachment proceedings. The move comes after a series of scandals and controversies surrounding his administration, including allegations of corruption and abuse of power.

    The opposition party has launched an impeachment motion against Han Duck-soo, citing a lack of transparency and accountability in his government. They argue that he has failed to uphold the principles of democracy and rule of law, and that his actions have undermined the country’s stability and prosperity.

    Han Duck-soo has denied any wrongdoing and has vowed to fight the impeachment proceedings. However, public opinion is divided, with many calling for his resignation and a fresh start for the country.

    As the impeachment process unfolds, South Korea is facing a period of uncertainty and instability. The outcome of these proceedings will have far-reaching implications for the future of the country and its political landscape. Stay tuned for updates on this developing story.

    Tags:

    1. South Korea
    2. Acting President
    3. Han Duck-soo
    4. Impeachment
    5. South Korean politics
    6. Government crisis
    7. Political instability
    8. Constitutional crisis
    9. South Korean leadership
    10. Han Duck-soo impeachment proceedings

    #South #Koreas #acting #President #Han #Ducksoo #faces #impeachment

  • 1998 OCT 7 NEW YORK TIMES NEWSPAPER – DEMS SEEK UNITY ON IMPEACHMENT – NP 7093

    1998 OCT 7 NEW YORK TIMES NEWSPAPER – DEMS SEEK UNITY ON IMPEACHMENT – NP 7093



    1998 OCT 7 NEW YORK TIMES NEWSPAPER – DEMS SEEK UNITY ON IMPEACHMENT – NP 7093

    Price : 50.00 – 35.00

    Ends on : N/A

    View on eBay
    In the October 7, 1998 edition of The New York Times, the headline reads “Dems Seek Unity on Impeachment.” The article discusses how Democratic leaders are working to unite their party in the face of the impeachment proceedings against President Bill Clinton. With NP 7093 as the issue number, this newspaper is sure to provide in-depth coverage and analysis of this historic moment in American politics. Stay informed with The New York Times.
    #OCT #YORK #TIMES #NEWSPAPER #DEMS #SEEK #UNITY #IMPEACHMENT

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