Republican lawmakers expressed concern on “political motivation” behind the House Democrats’ impeachment effort after House Democrats issued their first impeachment inquiry subpoena on Friday, Sept. 27.
The Committee on Foreign Affairs issued the subpoena to Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and five other State Department officials after consultation with the House Intelligence Committee and the Committee on Oversight and Reform.
The House Democrats requested documents related to the Trump administration’s dealings with the Ukraine government.
Senate Finance Chairman Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), who is the former chairman of Senate Judiciary Committee, pointed out that House Democrats started the impeachment inquiry without a House resolution.
“Why are House Democrats cutting House Republicans out of the process of developing Articles of Impeachment and not following same procedures used in Nixon and Clinton impeachments???? Seems like a political motivation not a constitutional one!!!” he said in a Twitter post on Saturday, Sept. 28.
Grassley is not the only Republican who is worried about the partisan way the impeachment inquiry was kicked off.
“Pelosi bypassed the official vote that’s typically required to start an impeachment inquiry,” House Minority Whip Rep. Steve Scalise (R-La.) tweeted on Saturday, “This isn’t a serious, fact-based process. It’s a reckless scheme to attack @realDonaldTrump.”
Rep. Doug Collins (R-Ga.), Ranking Member of the House Judiciary Committee, demanded a House floor vote after Pelosi’s announcement.
“Today isn’t what impeachment looks like, and this afternoon’s press conference changes nothing legally. There has been no House vote to authorize a formal impeachment inquiry. If Democrats believed the facts were in their favor, they would provide the due process that the House provided under the Clinton and Nixon impeachments,” he said.
The Constitution doesn’t say whether a House resolution is necessary to launch an impeachment inquiry. However, the impeachment inquiries against former Presidents Richard Nixon and Bill Clinton were launched in a more bipartisan way with a House floor vote.