Schumer lays out Senate to-do list with Mayorkas impeachment on deck

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) on Friday laid out a lengthy to-do list for the months ahead in the upper chamber, including a number of bipartisan items, must-pass bills and executive and judicial branch nominations.

Schumer wrote in a letter to his Democratic colleagues that the chamber has a “busy agenda” coming up. But first, the chamber is expected to deal with the articles of impeachment against Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas.

“Please be advised that all Senators will be sworn in as jurors in the trial the day after the articles are presented, and Senate President Pro Tempore Patty Murray will preside,” he said. “I remind Senators that your presence next week is essential.”

The Democratic leader did not say how he plans to deal with a potential trial, but lawmakers have expected for months that Schumer will dispense with the articles in some fashion. He could either vote to dismiss them outright on the floor or refer them to a special committee and essentially bury them until after the election, sparing his members up in November from taking a tough vote that could be used against them on the campaign trail.

“Leader Schumer has not been specific in how he intends to execute on that,” Sen. Laphonza Butler (D-Calif.) told reporters on Capitol Hill earlier this week. “But let’s be clear — this was an impeachment in search of a problem, and what I hope is that we’re able to dismiss it quickly and get onto the business of the American people.”

“Whatever way is the way for us to execute our obligations and move forward as quickly as possible,” she added when asked if it matters how Schumer tries to sidestep the articles.

Also on the immediate to-do list are renewals of section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act later this month and the extension of the Federal Aviation Administration’s authority in May. Schumer also noted that he expects bipartisan work to commence in short order on a supplemental to help rebuild the Francis Scott Key Bridge after it collapsed, shutting down much of the Port of Baltimore as a result.

Schumer also highlighted the ongoing push for more aid to Ukraine to help its war efforts against Russia and called on Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) once again to put the upper chamber’s national security supplemental on the House floor in the coming weeks. Johnson has been looking at different avenues to get a bill passed, including turning that funding into a loan in order to mollify some conservatives. Opening up that package, though, could be problematic as it could lead to Democrats to peel away over the situation in Gaza. 

Also on the New York Democrat’s wish list for the coming months are bipartisan bills related to online safety for kids, an expansion of the Child Tax Credit, potentially banning TikTok, and rail safety.

“There are many important, bipartisan issues this Congress could address this year, and I hope our Senate Republican colleagues don’t allow the ultra-right wing of their party to derail progress on these bipartisan bills,” he wrote.

All of this work will buttress up against the November election and attempts to protect Democratic incumbents running in red and purple states. Seats held by Sens. Jon Tester (D-Mont.) and Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio) are the top targets of Republicans heading into the fall. 

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Kristi Noem forced to face combat veteran whose Irish wife has been jailed for four months



Department of Homeland Security Kristi Noem was put in the awkward position of apologizing to U.S. military veterans whose lives have been turned upside down, after a Democratic lawmaker who came armed to the teeth with tales of ICE immigrant overreach.

During questioning before the House Homeland Security Committee, the embattled Noem, who is reportedly on the way out at DHS, was confronted by Rep. Seth Magaziner (D-RI) who followed up her claim, “We have not deported U.S. citizens or military veterans,” by asking, “I don't believe you served in the military. I haven't either, but I think you and I can agree that, as Americans, we owe everything to those who have served our country in uniform, particularly those who have served in combat. Do you agree with that?”

She answered, “I believe that people that are in this United States that are citizens have legal status here.”

Magaziner then offered up a Purple Heart veteran who is now living in South Korea due to ICE, and who appeared at the hearing via Zoom, before directing her attention to veteran Jim Brown, who was in the audience and whose wife, a native of Ireland, has been jailed by DHS for four months as she awaits deportation.

In an interview with the Guardian, Brown gained national attention for confessing, “... he ‘100%”’regretted voting for Donald Trump as president.”

“Madam Secretary, the man behind you, please stand up, sir, his name is Jim Brown from Troy, Missouri," Magaziner began. “He is a Navy combat veteran who served our country in the Gulf War. He's married to a woman named Donna who came to our country legally from Ireland when she was 11 years old. She has lived here for 48 years. Because of you. Jim's wife, Donna, has been in prison for the last four months. She did not come here illegally and she has never committed any crime other than writing two bad checks totaling $80.10 years ago. She is currently in prison and facing deportation.”

“Miss Noem, will you thank Mr. Brown for his service to our country?” he asked.

Noem turned in her seat to the right and murmured to the standing veteran, "Thank you, Mr. Brown, for your service to our country.”

"Now, what possible explanation can there be for locking up his wife for four months when she has committed no crime, other than writing a couple of bad checks for $80?” the Democratic lawmaker pressed.

“Sir, it is not my prerogative, my attitude or my job to pick and choose which laws in this country get enforced,” she demurred.

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