Why Democrats love all the 鈥榠mpeach Obama鈥 talk
At a Monitor breakfast Friday, an Obama aide said that House Speaker John Boehner鈥檚 move to sue President Obama has 鈥榦pened the door to Republicans possibly considering impeachment.鈥
At a Monitor breakfast Friday, an Obama aide said that House Speaker John Boehner鈥檚 move to sue President Obama has 鈥榦pened the door to Republicans possibly considering impeachment.鈥
When Dan Pfeiffer sat down for a Monitor breakfast Friday with reporters, the senior Obama adviser didn鈥檛 need to be asked about impeachment. He brought it up himself.
GOP House Speaker John Boehner鈥檚 move to sue President Obama has 鈥渙pened the door to Republicans possibly considering impeachment at some point in the future,鈥 Mr. Pfeiffer said.
A few hours later, White House spokesman Josh Earnest also didn鈥檛 seem to mind talking impeachment, after a reporter brought up Pfeiffer鈥檚 comment.
鈥淭here are some prominent members of the Republican Party who have articulated their support for articles of impeachment,鈥 Mr. Earnest said at his daily briefing. 鈥淲hat we鈥檙e focused on is the business of the American people.鈥
Translation: Republicans = frivolous. Democrats = serious.
It might not even be too strong to say that Democrats love all the talk of impeachment, even if the most prominent Republican to beat that drum is former vice-presidential nominee Sarah Palin.
Or perhaps it鈥檚 especially because Ms. Palin is leading the charge that Democrats are gleeful. She鈥檚 the perfect foil. Now several years out of elective office, the ex-governor of Alaska and tea party rabble-rouser still knows how to grab headlines. And when she brings up the 鈥淚-word,鈥 you can be sure a Democratic fundraising e-mail isn鈥檛 far behind.
Less than four months before the November midterms, Palin鈥檚 impeachment talk is a gift to Democrats. And it鈥檚 not just about money: It鈥檚 also about turnout. Democrats are famous for not voting in midterms as reliably as Republicans.
Pfeiffer mentioned a CNN/ORC poll that came out Friday showing that 35 percent of Americans support the impeachment of Mr. Obama, while 57 percent of Republicans do. Pfeiffer even put a timeline on possible impeachment: after Obama takes executive action on immigration, which the aide said would come after the summer.
鈥淚 think that the president acting on immigration reform will certainly up the likelihood that they would contemplate impeachment at some point,鈥 he said.
Speaker Boehner鈥檚 spokesman called Pfeiffer鈥檚 comments 鈥減olitical games.鈥
Pfeiffer鈥檚 comments also created fodder for Democratic fundraising e-mails on impeachment.
鈥淭his is an all-hands-on-deck moment,鈥 said an e-mail from the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee. 鈥淎 top White House official just said that 鈥楽peaker Boehner ... has opened the door to impeachment ....鈥 "
Never mind that Boehner and other establishment Republicans know that an effort to impeach Obama would almost surely backfire. Right after House Republicans impeached President Clinton in December 1998 for perjury and obstruction of justice, his job approval rating shot up 10 percentage points to 73 percent in the Gallup poll.
It was an all-time high for Mr. Clinton鈥檚 presidency, and one of the higher job approval ratings of any US president since the mid-1960s, according to Gallup.
Clinton had also just launched airstrikes against Iraq and its leader, Saddam Hussein, a popular move. But there鈥檚 no doubt that the House vote for impeachment also boosted Clinton鈥檚 stock. Only 31 percent of those polled said the Senate should proceed with a trial. Two months later, Clinton was easily acquitted in the Senate.
Fast-forward to today. Will Republican backbenchers in the House, many of them elected with tea party support, keep up the talk of impeachment, despite the history? Not if their party elders have a say.
鈥淲e are not working on or drawing up articles of impeachment,鈥 House Judiciary Committee chairman Robert Goodlatte (R) of Virginia said July 13 on ABC News鈥檚 鈥淭his Week.鈥 鈥淭he Constitution is very clear as to what constitutes grounds for impeachment of the president of the United States. He has not committed the kind of criminal acts that call for that.鈥
But Boehner鈥檚 lawsuit is a different matter. On Thursday, the House Rules Committee approved a resolution backing the suit over Obama鈥檚 delay of the employer mandate in the Affordable Care Act. Republicans say the president overstepped his constitutional authority. The full House is expected to take up the measure before its August recess.