Rep. Nancy Mace (R-SC) does not anticipate an impeachment of President Joe Biden will happen anytime soon.
Mace appeared on Fox News’s Sunday Morning Futures to share her foresight as Congress is entering its second week in session and several impeachment inquiries have begun against Biden. According to Mace, should the president be suspected of bribery, that is an impeachable offense. She also shared her pessimism about its likelihood.
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Impeachment will never get 60 votes in a Democratic Senate regardless of how much evidence we present. We need to release all our evidence to the American people so they can decide if this guy — who sold out his country for millions of dollars — should be president. pic.twitter.com/kmc2DsnoZr
— Rep. Nancy Mace (@RepNancyMace) September 10, 2023
“But the problem Dagen, as you know is, we will never get 60 votes in a Democrat controlled Senate no matter how much evidence we present, and so from my perspective, the House Oversight, Judiciary, Ways and Means need to continue our investigations,” Mace told host Dagen McDowell. “We need to show the American people all of the evidence that we uncover. We need to do it in swift order. We need more subpoenas. I want the bookkeeper.”
Already, Congress has opened an investigation into the president’s son Hunter Biden while also examining the president’s involvement in Hunter’s business. Another investigation will examine how the Department of Justice’s investigation was conducted. Mace shared her sense of urgency as Biden is up for reelection in 2024.
“We have to win in the court of public opinion so people can decide whether or not this guy, who sold out his country for millions and millions of dollars, should be president,” Mace said.
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Mace has long insisted on speaking to former Ukrainian prosecutor Viktor Shokin, who over the weekend claimed Biden was behind his removal in March 2016.
Biden is facing off against two other Democratic candidates, environmental lawyer Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and author Marianne Williamson, in the race to win his second term. There are thirteen Republican candidates vying for their party’s nomination.