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Opinion My fellow Republicans: One disgraceful impeachment doesn’t deserve another

cigaretteman

HB King
May 29, 2001
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Ken Buck, a Republican, represents Colorado’s 4th Congressional District in the House.
The House is back in session, and Americans are getting an up-close look at Washington’s dysfunction. We are barreling toward a government shutdown without making progress on cutting our out-of-control spending. Yet Republican leadership has decided to divert attention to an impeachment inquiry into President Biden.


The GOP’s charge against Biden is that he personally benefited from his son’s deplorable business exploits around the globe. Without doubt, Hunter Biden’s shady business deals undermined America’s image and our anti-corruption goals, and his conduct was thoroughly reprehensible. What’s missing, despite years of investigation, is the smoking gun that connects Joe Biden to his ne’er-do-well son’s corruption.


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My fellow Republicans leading the House inquiry believe the connection comes through the 2016 firing of Ukrainian prosecutor Viktor Shokin, which then-Vice President Biden helped facilitate.
The dominant narrative in right-wing media is that Shokin was an anti-corruption zealot with an active investigation into Burisma, the company where Hunter Biden held a seat on the board of directors, and from which he reportedly received large monthly payments.
The truth about Shokin is much more complicated and runs counter to the GOP’s “gotcha” narrative. In reality, Shokin was deeply enmeshed in Ukraine’s culture of corruption and, far from being a beacon of transparency, was viewed by many in the West — including some conservative Republican senators — as an obstacle to anti-corruption reforms. There is, in fact, no evidence that Shokin was engaged in an investigation of Burisma, or that Joe Biden’s role in his firing was in any way connected to Burisma.



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Much attention has been focused on a speech Biden delivered in December 2015 before Ukraine’s parliament, in which he explicitly called for change at the prosecutor general’s office. Far from being out of line with U.S. policy, Biden’s remarks were entirely within the U.S. government’s paradigm of helping Ukraine break free from its lawless Soviet past. Other senior officials, including U.S. Ambassador Geoffrey Pyatt, made the case during the same period for firing Shokin.

The European Union, which necessarily pays a great deal of attention to the politics and policies of neighboring Ukraine, was also of the opinion that Shokin should be sacked. Shokin had been the biggest barrier to the E.U.’s years-long efforts to encourage rule-of-law reforms in Ukraine.
These facts — like all facts — are stubborn things.
Marc A. Thiessen: The Biden impeachment inquiry was inevitable
Republicans in the House who are itching for an impeachment are relying on an imagined history. Their inquiry, formally announced by Speaker of the House Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) on Tuesday, rests heavily on a fictitious version of Shokin’s career, with the alleged investigation of Burisma at the center. It’s a neat story, and one that performs well in certain media circles. But impeachment is a serious matter and should have a foundation of rock-solid facts.



Does this flimsy excuse for an impeachment sound familiar? It should.
In 2019, the Democratic-controlled House, led by then-Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), pursued an impeachment of President Donald Trump on the loose allegation of a quid pro quo — again involving Ukraine and Shokin. The Democrats alleged that Trump called Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky to pressure him into examining the theoretical connection between Hunter Biden’s payments from Burisma and Shokin’s firing. Trump ultimately did withhold aid from Ukraine, consistent with the U.S. government’s long-standing policy of tying aid to anti-corruption reforms. But the Democrats were off and running.
I joined my Republican colleagues then in denouncing that impeachment. It was, as we argued at the time, an inversion of our own rule-of-law system. The Democrats had their man and found a pretext to impeach him.
Trump’s impeachment in 2019 was a disgrace to the Constitution and a disservice to Americans. The GOP’s reprise in 2023 is no better.

 
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Reactions: abby97
LOL...Trump was withholding congressionally approved aid to pressure Zelensky into investigating Trump's political rival. Based on nothing. Period. There was no backing for such an investigation anywhere in the international community as existed with the firing of Shokin. Buck spends his entire editorial demonstrating there was no there, there...then bases his claim that Trump's first impeachment was "disgraceful" on the premise that Trump's demand of an investigation by Ukraine was merited.
 
Neither Trump or Biden is worthy of impeachment. Problem is the Democrats let their TDS overwhelm them and they let the impeachment genie out of the bottle…twice. Once out it’s very difficult to put it back in.
How about the genie of a president using approved aid to pressure a foreign govt to do his personal political biding? To make an announcement of an investigation - which is ALL Trump wanted - into a political rival for political purposes? Trump wanted Zelensky himself to step up to a microphone - in public - and announce that Ukraine was investigating Hunter and Joe Biden. Should that genie be at the beck and call of a sitting president?
 
How about the genie of a president using approved aid to pressure a foreign govt to do his personal political biding? To make an announcement of an investigation - which is ALL Trump wanted - into a political rival for political purposes? Trump wanted Zelensky himself to step up to a microphone - in public - and announce that Ukraine was investigating Hunter and Joe Biden. Should that genie be at the beck and call of a sitting president?

While I suppose you could argue whether or not Trump’s actions were impeachment-level; it’s simply dishonest to label that as TDS. ON TAPE, he is heard pushing Zelensky to announce an investigation of Biden. That’s not made up, not 3rd hand reporting, just a fact.

They’re completely unable to point to a specific crime committed by Hunter around Burisma; let alone whatever Joe is supposed to have done.
 
While I suppose you could argue whether or not Trump’s actions were impeachment-level; it’s simply dishonest to label that as TDS. ON TAPE, he is heard pushing Zelensky to announce an investigation of Biden. That’s not made up, not 3rd hand reporting, just a fact.

They’re completely unable to point to a specific crime committed by Hunter around Burisma; let alone whatever Joe is supposed to have done.
You're such a mook.
 
  • Haha
Reactions: Kelsers
LOL...Trump was withholding congressionally approved aid to pressure Zelensky into investigating Trump's political rival. Based on nothing. Period. There was no backing for such an investigation anywhere in the international community as existed with the firing of Shokin. Buck spends his entire editorial demonstrating there was no there, there...then bases his claim that Trump's first impeachment was "disgraceful" on the premise that Trump's demand of an investigation by Ukraine was merited.

Yeah, this is the worst false equivalency of all time. What Biden did was 100% the correct thing to do, and at the time Republicans agreed.

What Trump did was disgraceful, unlawful, absolutely should have resulted in impeachment and conviction.
 
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While I suppose you could argue whether or not Trump’s actions were impeachment-level; it’s simply dishonest to label that as TDS. ON TAPE, he is heard pushing Zelensky to announce an investigation of Biden. That’s not made up, not 3rd hand reporting, just a fact.

They’re completely unable to point to a specific crime committed by Hunter around Burisma; let alone whatever Joe is supposed to have done.
And now we know why.....
 
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