Cont: The Biden Presidency (3)

Status
Not open for further replies.
I want the GOP to try, and then crash and burn and see 10 or more House GOPers vote not to impeach Biden. Would be a good campaign victory for Biden, make him look like the victim of a witch hunt.

Not really that hard, given that he pretty clearly is the focus of witch hunts. Unlike the many Republicans where clear and serious cause for concern was found before any real investigation happened but still tried to claim that or other similar BS was what was actually happening.
 
I agree the idiots like MTG will try to impeach him, but my point was that he won't be impeached because they know they don't have the evidence. I don't think they could get enough GOP votes to actually impeach him for that reason.

It will maybe come up for vote in the house. But it will not get the votes. I live in a red state and we have three congressmen. One of them will not vote for it. as he is in an urban district he barely won. He does not need Trump anymore, in fact he is avoiding Trump. Those type of house members will simply not vote on the issue, so no majority. There will be a good 10 people in the house doing that.
 
I often see Trump described as “twice impeached”, and not in a flattering way.

Even a failed impeachment seems to carry a certain stigma. I think the mere act of impeachment is their goal, not a conviction.

Well this will not get that far. It will simply be voted on and will not ever go to a senate trial.
 
I often see Trump described as “twice impeached”, and not in a flattering way.

Even a failed impeachment seems to carry a certain stigma. I think the mere act of impeachment is their goal, not a conviction.
If the question of impeachment is brought to a vote in the HoR and the result is no, then Biden will not have been impeached. It wouldn't be a failed impeachment; it would be a non-impeachment, no kind of impeachment at all. Trump was impeached. The HoR voted yes in his cases.
 
From the White House, September 9 2023:

"Through the India-Middle East-Europe Economic Corridor, we aim to usher in a new era of connectivity with a railway, linked through ports connecting Europe, the Middle East, and Asia. The United States and our partners intend to link both continents to commercial hubs and facilitate the development and export of clean energy; lay undersea cables and link energy grids and telecommunication lines to expand reliable access to electricity; enable innovation of advanced clean energy technology; and connect communities to secure and stable Internet. Across the corridor, we envision driving existing trade and manufacturing and strengthening food security and supply chains. Our approach aims to unlock new investments from partners, including the private sector, and spur the creation of quality jobs."

Visionary, IMHO.
 
House has subpoena power, no need for an impeachment inquiry to get questions answered. This is already overkill on the part of the GOP.

Biden already winning so far.
 
Exactly, the underinformed will just hear impeachment and assume there are grounds.

They assume that already, the bank records are only to provide the evidence.

IOW they have no evidence, only drooling-desires based on projection.
 
Do we really believe the GOP voter base has a problem with impeaching Biden?

Show me the outrage and then we'll talk.

Of course not. They love it. They think Biden is evil, if just a level below Barack HUSSEIN Obama and Hilary "Benghazi" Clinton.
 
Biden's NLRB has been making rulings so astoundingly good, that alone is more than good reason to support a 2nd term:

Last Friday, the National Labor Relations Board released its most important ruling in many decades. In a party-line decision in Cemex Construction Materials Pacific, LLC, the Board ruled that when a majority of a company’s employees file union affiliation cards, the employer can either voluntarily recognize their union or, if not, ask the Board to run a union recognition election. If, in the run-up to or during that election, the employer commits an unfair labor practice, such as illegally firing pro-union workers (which has become routine in nearly every such election over the past 40 years, as the penalties have been negligible), the Board will order the employer to recognize the union and enter forthwith into bargaining.

The Cemex decision was preceded by another, one day earlier, in which the Board, also along party lines, set out rules for representation elections which required them to be held promptly after the Board had been asked to conduct them, curtailing employers’ ability to delay them, often indefinitely.


Taken together, this one-two punch effectively makes union organizing possible again, after decades in which unpunished employer illegality was the most decisive factor in reducing the nation’s rate of private-sector unionization from roughly 35 percent to the bare 6 percent at which it stands today.

https://prospect.org/labor/2023-08-28-bidens-nlrb-brings-workers-rights-back/

Very good reasons to support Dem candidates too, as Manchin and Sinema are currently standing in the way of future good NLRB policy:

One reason that these two landmark decisions came down last week was that the term of one of the three Biden appointees to the Board, Gwynne Wilcox, is about to run out. Board terms normally last for five years, but Wilcox was appointed for just two years to fill out the balance of the term of a member who had retired early. Once she’s off the Board, there will be just three members, since one of the Board’s Republican seats has now been vacant for nearly a year. (By mutual consent, the Board is composed of three members from the president’s party and two from the opposition.) And when it has only three members, the Board is forbidden from making decisions that change its rules.

The normal procedure for filling seats on the Board (like with many multimember commissions) is that an appointee from one party comes before the Senate for confirmation in tandem with an appointee from the other party. However, hoping to thwart the now Biden-dominated Board from making decisions like those of last week, the Republicans, backed by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, have declined to put forth a nominee to fill the vacant Republican seat, plainly hoping that Democrats would adhere to the custom of not bringing up an unaccompanied Biden appointee for a vote. More precisely, they’ve wagered that the anti-worker duo of Sens. Manchin and Sinema would deny that nominee the 51st vote required for confirmation, using the fig leaf of the absence of a Republican nominee to justify their opposition.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Back
Top Bottom