House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., is seeking to transfer ahead with a proper impeachment inquiry vote in opposition to President Biden, saying that it’s a “necessary step” because the White House continues to stonewall investigations by House Republicans into alleged wrongdoing by the Biden household.
Johnson’s remarks got here throughout a Saturday look on “Fox & Friends Weekend,” the place he, together with House GOP convention chair Elise Stefanik, R-N.Y., spoke to a number of matters and had been requested about plans to convey forth a vote on impeachment.
“It’s become a necessary step,” he mentioned. “Elise and I both served on the impeachment defense team of Donald Trump twice when the Democrats used it for brazen, partisan political purposes. We decried that use of it. This is very different. Remember, we are the rule of law team. We have to do it very methodically.”
“Our three committees of jurisdiction — judiciary, oversight, ways and means — have been doing an extraordinary job following the evidence where it leads,” he continued. “But now we’re being stonewalled by the White House, because they’re preventing at least two to three DOJ witnesses from coming forward, a former White House counsel, the national archives . . . the White House has withheld thousands of pages of evidence.”
HOUSE REPUBLICANS ANTICIPATE VOTE TO FORMALIZE BIDEN IMPEACHMENT INQUIRY ‘SOON’

House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., mentioned a “formal impeachment inquiry vote on the floor will allow [Republicans] to take it to the next necessary step.” (Drew Angerer/Getty Images)
Reaffirming his perception in transferring ahead with the method, Johnson mentioned a “formal impeachment inquiry vote on the floor will allow [Republicans] to take it to the next necessary step.”
“I think it’s something we have to do at this juncture,” he added.
Johnson’s feedback got here after a number of Republicans mentioned Friday {that a} vote to formalize the impeachment inquiry of President Biden is prone to come earlier than the House of Representatives breaks for the December recess.
House Rules Committee Chairman Tom Cole, R-Okla., instructed reporters he anticipated his committee to get the laws “sometime next week,” which can doubtless tee up a House-wide vote shortly thereafter.
Rep. Carlos Gimenez, R-Fla., mentioned that he anticipates a House-wide vote “before we will break” on December 15.
“I think that every Republican should be convinced about voting for the impeachment inquiry, there’s plenty of smoke there,” Gimenez mentioned.
The Republicans spoke after a closed-door House GOP Conference assembly the place the three chairmen investigating Biden and his household — Oversight Chairman James Comer, R-Ky.; Judiciary Chairman Jim Jordan, R-Ohio; and Ways & Means Chairman Jason Smith, R-Mo. — reiterating their case for lawmakers.
Republican Study Committee Chairman Kevin Hern, R-Okla., mentioned that the assembly had been held “to see where the votes are and make sure everybody’s communicated with, people have had their chance to understand what an impeachment inquiry is versus impeachment.”
HOUSE GOP DISCUSSING VOTE TO FORMALIZE BIDEN IMPEACHMENT INQUIRY

Rep. Kevin Hern mentioned that House Republicans had met Friday to see ‘where the votes are’ on formalizing an impeachment inquiry into Biden. (Photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images)
“It’s important we get it done as soon as possible so that we can move forward with this investigation,” Hern mentioned.
Rep. Greg Murphy, R-N.C., mentioned a vote would doubtless come “soon” and contrasted the push to formalize Republicans’ impeachment inquiry with how House Democrats dealt with former President Donald Trump, transferring ahead with the impeachment course of and not using a House-wide vote.
“We’re actually trying to do it the right way,” Murphy mentioned.
Former Speaker Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., directed the House to open an impeachment inquiry into Biden in September, however the White House has dismissed the probe as illegitimate and not using a formal vote on the matter.
The administration’s resistance to cooperating with House investigators’ subpoenas has impressed even Republicans in districts received by Biden in 2020 to help formalizing the inquiry.
Rep. David Schweikert, R-Ariz., instructed Fox News Digital, “This is what the administration has asked for.”
“The administration made it very clear, they weren’t going to actually work with our constitutional authority, unless we did the vote. Fine,” Schweikert mentioned.

Johnson’s feedback got here after a number of Republicans mentioned on Friday {that a} vote to formalize the impeachment inquiry of President Biden is prone to come earlier than the House of Representatives breaks for the December recess. (ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS/AFP through Getty Images)
Oversight Democrats despatched out a five-page memo Friday morning rebutting Republicans’ claims, citing a “mountain of evidence” they mentioned clears Biden of any wrongdoing.
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“Rather than accept these facts, Republicans have resorted to cherry-picking and distorting facts in order to justify continuing this sham investigation aimed at satisfying the demands for retribution of President Trump who was twice indicted and now faces 91 felony counts,” the memo learn.
Fox News’ Elizabeth Elkind contributed to this report.