McCarthy's ouster as House speaker triggers Biden impeachment probe uncertainty

WASHINGTON Kevin McCarthys removal as House speaker Tuesdayintroduced new uncertaintyinto the impeachment inquiryinto President Biden as allies and enemies of the deposed Californian traded blame over his ouster.

Explore More

WASHINGTON — Kevin McCarthy’s removal as House speaker Tuesday introduced new uncertainty into the impeachment inquiry into President Biden— as allies and enemies of the deposed Californian traded blame over his ouster.

The shakeup threatens to undermine the short-term legal standing of the probe into Biden’s role in his family’s foreign business dealings as Rep. Patrick McHenry (R-NC) serves as acting speaker indefinitely.

However, proceedings could be turbocharged if Judiciary Committee Chairman Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) wins his bid for the gavel.

A source close to Jordan told The Post that the inquiry will proceed “full speed ahead” if he becomes speaker, though he faces competition from Majority Leader Steve Scalise (R-La.) and potentially other contenders who have been less focused on Biden corruption allegations.

In the meantime, a second source told The Post, staff in the House speaker’s office have “discussed the fact that Speaker pro tempore McHenry’s unprecedented position as interim speaker could open his every decision to legal scrutiny, meaning the institution of the House could face litigation.”

McCarthy (R-Calif.) announced the impeachment inquiry Sept. 12 and delegated work to the Oversight, Judiciary and tax-focused Ways and Means committees.

Rep. Kevin McCarthy was removed as House speaker after a vote on Oct. 3, 2023. Branden Camp/ZUMA Press Wire
The McCarthy ouster has brought uncertainty to the impeachment inquiry into President Biden. AP Photo/Evan Vucci

But he didn’t hold a floor vote to affirm the inquiry, putting it on shaky legal ground now that he is no longer in charge.

It isn’t clear if McCarthy’s successor would have to re-declare the impeachment inquiry to affirm its legal grounding, and the transition could bolster the case for a floor vote, which wasn’t held last month as a handful of vocal holdouts increased the stakes for legislators in swing districts.

Republican leaders said the inquiry was needed to strengthen the House’s standing to acquire documents, including from the executive branch and banks. Committees’ power to subpoena records is strengthened in disputes by the constitutional importance of impeachment.

Rep. Jim Jordan told The Post the impeachment inquiry would move “full speed ahead” if he becomes speaker. Photo by Drew Angerer/Getty Images

House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer (R-Ky.) issued subpoenas last week for the bank records of first son Hunter Biden and first brother James Biden in one of the highest-stakes demands to date.

Hunter and James Biden regularly involved Joe Biden in their business relationships in countries such as China and Ukraine and their bank records could show whether Joe Biden received foreign income during his eight-year vice presidency.

Hunter Biden wrote in a message retrieved from his abandoned laptop that he had to give “half” of his income to his father, and the Oversight Committee in May traced the flow of foreign income through Biden family associates to nine of the president’s relatives.

House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer has issued subpoenas for Hunter and James Biden’s bank records. Photo by MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images

The Oversight Committee is also seeking access to Air Force Two flight manifests, nearly 5,400 documents featuring Joe Biden’s use of emails registered to aliases and an array of other records.

A spokesperson for the Oversight Committee said Wednesday the panel is pushing ahead amid the leadership shuffle.

“The committee is continuing to review documents, records and communications and will take further action in the coming days,” the spokesperson said.

The White House didn’t respond to a request for comment.

McCarthy was elected speaker on Jan. 7 after a dramatic battle with fiscal hawks who demanded concessions such as the right of a single member to bring a motion to vacate, the mechanism that was used to boot McCarthy Tuesday following the Saturday passage of a 45-day spending bill that didn’t include cuts.

Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.) triggered the motion against McCarthy and argued that Republicans had done too little to press forward the inquiry into Biden.

“It is difficult to champion oversight when House Republicans haven’t even sent a subpoena to Hunter Biden. So it’s hard to make the argument that oversight is the reason to continue when it looks like failure theater,” Gaetz said during Tuesday’s House floor debate.

McCarthy and his allies accused Gaetz of leading the charge to oust him due to personal grievances, rather than over the continuing resolution to fund the government.

Gaetz indicated in a months-old text message reviewed by The Post that McCarthy was to blame for an ongoing House Ethics Committee probe of a series of allegations against the Floridian.

In recent weeks, McCarthy publicly attributed Gaetz’s rebellion to the fact that the now-ex-speaker wouldn’t step in to squash the ethics investigation. Gaetz said his grievances with McCarthy had nothing to do with the ethics investigation and accused the Californian of misdirection.

McCarthy has claimed that Rep. Matt Gaetz triggered the motion against him because the speaker refused to squash a House ethics investigation into the Florida lawmaker. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst

The ex-speaker’s foes argue that he sealed his own fate with last week’s continuing resolution (CR).

The mud-slinging dragged in McCarthy allies on Wednesday.

Two anti-McCarthy GOP operatives told The Post that fiscal hawks were incensed by the stopgap bill, and blamed McCarthy’s hand-picked negotiators, staffer Brittan Specht and Rep. Garret Graves (R-La.), for botching talks within the Republican conference, accusing them of causing gridlock by fomenting mistrust between budget hawks and more moderate Republicans.

“For months, Brittan and Congressman Garret Graves played a massive outsized role [in spending talks],” said a Republican staffer. “They sat in the middle between House Freedom Caucus members and moderates.”

Rather than hash out a path forward, “we basically wasted the entire summer,” the staffer said, setting in motion McCarthy’s downfall.

Graves was “borderline obsessed” with defending his prior role in crafting June’s Fiscal Responsibility Act, which raised the debt ceiling through January 2025 in exchange for some spending concessions, the source said.

“I think some of it was incompetence. I think some of it was ego,” the staffer said.

The poor intra-caucus communication “tanked the entire appropriations process,” a second GOP source said.

The second source also said hardliners were particularly irked by Specht, a deputy chief of staff for McCarthy.

The top aide “was instrumental in screwing” fiscal hawks on the debt-ceiling bill and for “completely screwing over conservatives even more” by misconstruing more recent Freedom Caucus demands as red lines, contributing to an impasse, the source said.

“[Specht] wanted to get to jam conservatives and do a CR. Pretty unprecedented that you have a leadership staffer lying [or] at best not doing their job intentionally to make sure we did a CR,” the source charged.

Specht did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Graves unloaded Wednesday on the eight Republican rebels led by Gaetz who joined with Democrats to vote out McCarthy — slamming them as “arsonists who lit their house on fire.”

“There are 12 appropriations bills. Those bills are all moving,” Graves told reporters at the Capitol. “Now, the ones that aren’t moving, it’s for one reason: It’s because Matt Gaetz and some of the cronies have single-handedly prevented or obstructed those from moving forward.”

But conservatives opposed to McCarthy said it was not their fault — or Gaetz’s. 

The speaker’s ouster had “nothing to do with Gaetz,” the second anti-McCarthy source added, and “everything to do with the fact that this was the punishment they agreed to [in January] if he betrayed them.”

ncG1vNJzZmimqaW8tMCNnKamZ2Jlf3R7kGlmaWxforCkrdGtn7KrXaTCtMDEq2Saq12dvLa%2FxGaqqZ2RoLKzedOroKCflafAbq7InZynZZmivaatwqGknqakYr2zu8GeZK6mk5q%2Fta3Ip6uyZw%3D%3D

 Share!