Impeaching Mayorkas won’t resolve border issues or much of anything, but whose fault is it really?
Rudy Gutierrez for The Texas Tribune |
As CNN tell it, three Republican House committee
chairmen are already scheduling hearings within the next few weeks that would
include testimony to show that Mayorkas has failed to secure the border. Even
before any such hearings, Rep. Pete Fallon (R-Texas), has introduced articles
of impeachment, and Rep. Andy Biggs (R-Ariz.), says he will reintroduce.
The apparent grounds are that Mayorkas has “undermined the
operational control of our southern border and encouraged illegal immigration,”
and has lied to Congress that the border was secure.
Doing this was all part of the behind-the-scenes negotiations
with the most hardline Republicans to earn the Speaker’s post for Kevin
McCarthy. As with much of what we have seen in these early days, this is
puffery and messaging hype towards the administration, and to feed partisan
political needs.
But as a matter of practicality, there are three main immediate
problems, and could end up embarrassing themselves:
The hardliners may not have the votes in the House. Democrats
will oppose impeachment, of course, and several Republicans who are not part of
the Freedom Caucus say outright that failure on the border is not an
impeachable crime.
The Democratic-majority Senate, which would try the case, won’t
uphold an impeachment.
Most importantly, impeaching Mayorkas won’t resolve border
policies, enforcement, security or much of anything.
Whose Fault is the Border?
Don’t misunderstand. Clearly there are problems at the border,
and Mayorkas is the face of the administration. But it is the failure of
Congress itself to consider and shape a comprehensive approach to immigration
policy that is missing in inaction.
Mayorkas may be proving less than effective in his job, but he
is being caught in an endless cycle of unclear administration and border agency
policymaking, contradictory court decisions, executive actions by governors
reacting to legal, illegal, and legally gray migrations to the border, and an
absolute mess of a system that no one can figure out how to operate.
Firing or replacing Mayorkas won’t resolve what ails the border,
though that is a moot issue, since Mayorkas is not resigning.
Impeaching him with no evidence of ethical breach or violation
of law as the result of partisan politicking just seems well wide of the plate.
Impeachment is a tool. It only works if it fits the problem at hand.
Then Secretary of War William Belknap, was impeached by the House before being acquitted
by the Senate in 1876.
Rep. Chip Roy, a Texas Republican, a vocal member of the Freedom
group, insists that Mayorkas “has violated his oath, that he has undermined our
ability to defend our country.”
If that’s an impeachable offense, there are a lot of Republican members of Congress who might qualify for having voted to dump election results to consider renegade alternative slates of Electoral College slates to keep Donald Trump in office.
These are the same Republicans who won’t look at their
own lying Rep. George Santos, R-New York, for having invented an entire persona
and under investigation for having violated federal campaign finance laws and fraud
statutes.
Threat or Effectiveness?
CNN collected the quotes of a lot of Republicans who sound less
than persuaded that there is a case for impeachment. As we saw during the
Speaker votes, Republicans cannot afford to lose more than four votes, and there
already is at least one promise against impeachment from Rep. Tony Gonzales of
Texas.
“Has (Mayorkas) been totally dishonest to people? Yes. Has
he failed in his job miserably? Yes,” Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart, a Florida
Republican. “Are those grounds for impeachment? I don’t know.”
But let’s face it: Mayorkas is not the target here. We already
have promises from the likes of Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) to impeach
Joe Biden.
Until this week, we were wondering what the grounds might be,
but Republicans already seem to be measuring the building complaints about
handling classified documents – however blameless the violation or cooperative
the administration with Justice and the National Archives – just may fill in
the missing blanks.
Mayorkas has already testified in front of Congress numerous
times. Strangely, challenges from Congress members from both sides of the aisle
have not significantly halted migrants and the cartels now making a business of
delivering them to the border.
Empty threats are easier than the hard work of dealing with the
complexities of an understandable immigration policy.
Terry H. Schwadron retired as a senior editor at The
New York Times, Deputy Managing Editor at The Los Angeles Times and leadership
jobs at The Providence (RI) Journal-Bulletin. He was part of a Pulitzer Gold
Medal team in Los Angeles, and his team part of several Pulitzers in New York.
As an editor, Terry created new approaches in newsrooms, built technological
tools and digital media. He pursued efforts to recruit and train minority
journalists and in scholarship programs. A resident of Harlem, he volunteers in
community storytelling, arts in education programs, tutoring and is an active
freelance trombone player.