Thursday, January 25, 2024

TAKING DOWN THE BIDEN - MAYORKAS ORCHESTRATED MASS INVASION - House Committee Announces Date to Mark Up Alejandro Mayorkas Impeachment

SCOTUS Rules for Biden Admin. in
Texas Border Wire Case

But temporary decision is really just the beginning of the court fight
Washington, D.C. (January 25, 2024) – A Center for Immigration Studies analysis highlights this week’s Supreme Court order vacating an injunction imposed by the Fifth Circuit in DHS v. Texas. The case, brought by the state of Texas, sought to stop Biden’s CBP from destroying portions of a 29-mile section of concertina-wire (“c-wire”) barriers erected by the state along the Rio Grande to deter illegal migrants. Two of the Court’s conservatives — Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Amy Coney Barrett — joined the three liberal justices in that decision, but their order hardly settles the matter. In fact, given the unresolved factual and legal issues in this case, it’s really just begun.

“Texas’s legal effort to stop Biden’s CBP from destroying its property is far from over,” said Andrew Arthur, the Center’s fellow in law and policy and author of the analysis. “It will now go back to the Fifth Circuit to address Texas’s legal arguments in full.”

This conflict over whether the federal government or Texas is responsible for the enforcement of the border began in March 2021, when Texas Gov. Greg Abbott launched “Operation Lone Star,” a state effort to respond to the massive wave of migrants pouring across the border unleashed by Joe Biden’s reversal of his predecessor’s successful border deterrence policies. Under the initiative, Texas deployed state troopers and National Guard troops to monitor and respond to illegal border crossings.

It came to a head with the end of Title 42 on May 11, when the Texas Department of Public Safety (DPS) and Texas Military Department (TMD) began installing concertina wire barriers on the Texas side of the river to prevent smugglers and illegal entrants from crossing into populated areas where they could disappear before arrest. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) was apparently grateful for the help, except along 29 miles of the border in Maverick County, where agents began removing the c-wire in September, encouraging migrants to enter the country. The case has been making its way through the courts ever since.

Texas State Attorney General Ken Paxton issued a statement in response to the SCOTUS ruling, characterizing the Court’s order as “temporary” and stating, “The destruction of Texas’s border barriers will not help enforce the law or keep American citizens safe. This fight is not over, and I look forward to defending our state’s sovereignty.”

Arthur commented, “There are a lot of news cameras on the border; every time CBP rips out that wire, it will be seen by the public, and show voters how little interest the Biden administration has in enforcing the law.”
 

House Committee Announces Date to Mark Up Alejandro Mayorkas Impeachment

Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas speaks during a press conference announcing investment of Inflation Reduction Act funds at the St. Elizabeths Department of Homeland Security campus on Thursday, Aug. 17, 2023, in Washington. (Nathan Howard/AP)
Nathan Howard/AP

Republicans on the House Committee on Homeland Security are moving forward with their impeachment of embattled Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas.

The committee announced it will convene on Tuesday, January 30, to mark up articles of impeachment against Mayorkas for high crimes and misdemeanors.

Chairman Mark Green (R-TN) touted the committee’s yearlong “comprehensive investigation” into Mayorkas as well as “the causes, costs, and consequences of the unprecedented crisis at America’s borders, holding 10 hearings, publishing six reports totaling roughly 400 pages, and conducting extensive interviews with chief patrol agents for the U.S. Border Patrol.”

Green’s announcement continues:

Our thorough and fair investigation exposed Secretary Mayorkas’ abuse of power and refusal to comply with the law. In November, 201 Democrats voted to refer articles of impeachment against the secretary to our Committee and, having completed impeachment hearings earlier this month, we plan to mark up those articles next week.

The announcement comes as Senate negotiations pairing border security and foreign aid reach a low point. With that deal seemingly on life support, the House sending articles of impeachment to the Senate — which would almost certainly kill the resolution — could be another step in highlighting Democrat inaction on the border.

The committee published excerpts of transcripts from chief and deputy chief patrol agents at the Southwest border regarding what it calls “a number of consequences of Secretary Mayorkas’s open borders”:

  • Never before have agents seen such historic numbers of illegal crossings.
  • The lack of consequences enforced by this administration for illegal entry
  • Mass releases functioning as a pull factor for millions of illegal aliens
  • Illegal aliens are now turning themselves in to Border Patrol, knowing they will be released into the interior.
  • The expansive degree of cartel control at the Southwest border
  • Agents are being taken out of the field in order to help process and release illegal aliens.
  • Illegal aliens are spreading the word of our open border back home, encouraging more crossings.
  • The operational impacts of open borders, including closed checkpoints and national security/public safety risks
  • Border Patrol sector chiefs contradict Secretary Mayorkas and say they do not have operational control in their sectors.

Republican leadership has not indicated when articles of impeachment might be brought to the floor. However, leadership has worked with Green in reaching out to Republicans on the fence to alleviate their concerns with the impeachment of Mayorkas.

Recent reports suggest leadership has locked up – or is very close to doing so – enough support to impeach Mayorkas, although the numbers are tight.

Rep. Steve Scalise (R-LA) has remained in Louisiana while recovering from cancer treatments, but his office has said he will be back in Washington sometime in February.

Additionally, a special election to replace expelled Rep. George Santos (R-NY) takes place February 13. The race is considered a tight one, and its results could have significant implications for Speaker Mike Johnson’s (R-LA) ability to move forward with impeachment.

WATCH: Angel Mom Rips into DHS Chief Mayorkas: He is Partially Responsible for My Daughter’s Fentanyl Poisoning

C-SPAN

Bradley Jaye is a Capitol Hill Correspondent for Breitbart News. Follow him on X/Twitter at @BradleyAJaye.

 

No comments: