WASHINGTON — A Democratic lawmaker is launching a renegade effort to impeach President Donald Trump, pushing past party leaders on Wednesday with an attempt to force a procedural vote in the U.S. House that is expected to fail.
Rep. Shri Thanedar of Michigan announced his intention to charge ahead, saying that as an immigrant he wants to do all he can to protect America's Constitution and its institutions. His resolution, criticized by fellow Democrats, contains seven articles of impeachment against the Republican president.
''Donald J. Trump has been committing crimes since day one — bribery, corruption, taking power from Congress, creating an unlawful office in DOGE, violating First Amendment rights, ignoring due process,'' the congressman said earlier from the House floor.
It would be the historic third time Trump has faced impeachment efforts after being twice impeached during his first term as president — first in 2019 on charges related to withholding military aid to Ukraine as it confronted Russia and later on a charge of inciting insurrection over the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol by a mob of his supporters. Trump was acquitted both times by the Senate.
Thanedar is not the only Democrat who has signaled impeachment efforts against Trump. But his decision to go it almost alone, without backing from party leadership, comes as he faces his own political challenges at home, with several primary opponents looking to unseat him in his Detroit-area congressional district.
Rep. Pete Aguilar of California, chair of the House Democratic Caucus, said Democratic leadership would vote to sideline any effort to bring Thanedar's impeachment articles to a full vote, calling impeachment "not the right approach we should be taking.''
''Right now, our focus is on health care being stripped away from the American people," Aguilar said. ''That is the most urgent and dire thing that we could be talking about this week.''
Aguilar added that Trump ''is no stranger to impeachment" but said Thanedar's proposal is ''not ripe and not timely" given the negotiations over Republicans' budget reconciliation package.