Believe it or not, Senator Lindsey Graham (R-SC) had
actually suggested impeachment even earlier, this time over the Bowe Bergdahl
prisoner swap, in which the Obama administration freed five top-level Taliban
terrorists in exchange for the alleged deserter. He stated, “There will be
people on our side calling for his impeachment if he did that.” And Rep.
Dana Rohrabacher (R-CA) said in March that Obama could be up for impeachment if
he continued his “unconstitutional approaches” to immigration reform
and Obamacare.
But it was Palin’s comments that drove ire. At the time,
Palin’s critics leapt on the comments to suggest that Republicans more broadly
were planning impeachment; House Speaker John Boehner immediately fired back,
stating that he disagreed with Palin on impeachment.
There were some who defended Palin’s position – Mark
Levin explained, “our country is being destroyed….Here’s the dead truth.
Obama should be impeached, but he won’t be impeached. Obama should be impeached
if the Republicans take the Senate, but he won’t be impeached if the
Republicans take the Senate. Obama has committed high crimes and misdemeanors
by violating the constitution.”
Rep. Ted Yoho (R-FL) agreed with Levin in July: “He either
enforces the laws on the books—as he was hired and elected to do—or he leaves
Congress no option. This is not our choice, this is the President’s choice and
I would advise him to uphold the law on the books.” According to Breitbart
News, other members “hissed” Yoho.
Shortly thereafter, Rep. Steve King (R-IA) stated that
immigration action could lead to a “serious look” at impeaching Obama. “I
think then we have to sit down and take a look. Where would we draw the line
otherwise?”
Now, it appears, impeachment talk is reaching the supposed
mainstream of the conservative commentariat. On Thursday night, Charles
Krauthammer told Megyn Kelly on Fox News that Obama’s executive amnesty
amounted to “an impeachable offense.” Multiple Fox News commentators and
hosts have also mentioned impeachment, including Kelly, who correctly stated,
“Some would suggest if he goes too far he should be impeached.” Chris Wallace
has said the same: “You’re going to see calls for impeachment.” Sean Hannity
averred, “Normally, when a president does something that would bring the
country to a tipping point, the first thing people would say is impeachment.”
Judge Andrew Napolitano has also raised impeachment.
Congressmen are raising the specter of impeachment again,
too. Rep. Joe Barton (R-TX)said three days ago, “Well, impeachment is
indicting in the House and that’s a possibility. But you still have to convict
in the Senate and that takes a two-thirds vote. But impeachment would be a
consideration, yes sir.” Rep. Walter Jones (R-NC) said, “To me a
constitutional question means that we have the option of impeachment…We have a
Constitution, and I am very disappointed from year to year that we do not
follow the Constitution. To me, if you think the president has violated his
trust of office, meaning with the American people, then follow the Constitution.”
Jones has repeatedly called for Obama’s impeachment, and called for George W.
Bush’s impeachment over the Iraq war.
Andy McCarthy, author of Faithless Execution, wrote
today at National Review:
Impeaching Obama would be a very unpleasant choice, and
there is clearly no appetite for it. But living with what he is otherwise going
to do over the next two years (on top of what he has already done) will be a
more unpleasant choice. And there are no other choices.
President Obama is pursuing executive amnesty for two
reasons. First, he wants to fundamentally shift the demographics of the
country, legalizing millions of potential leftist voters and making millions
more dependent on the largesse of a massive federal government. Second,
Obama wants Republicans to pursue impeachment. If Republicans
were to impeach Obama in the House, no Senate trial would convict him – Bill
Clinton, who perjured himself before Congress, received 45 votes in the Senate
for conviction on perjury and 50 for conviction on obstruction of justice, at a
time when Republicans controlled 55 Senators. As of January, Republicans are
likely to control 54 seats in the Senate. Conviction of President Obama would
require 67 votes in the Senate.
Realistically, then, impeachment is not a real option. It
would turn President Obama from aggressor into victim, and craft a narrative of
aggressive Republican nastiness going into Bill Clinton’s big return to the
national stage alongside Hillary.
Nonetheless, Republicans have been led to impeachment because
there may be no other option. Republicans can defund major agencies, but courts
are unlikely to restrict Obama on his failures to enforce the law. The failure
to stop President Obama in 2012 may turn out to be the nail in the coffin for
American accountability.
Source: http://www.teaparty.org/impeachment-goes-mainstream-67533/
http://www.breitbart.com/Big-Government/2014/11/14/impeachment-goes-mainstream
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