U.S. House holds hearing to criticize President Bush
The Democratic-dominated Judiciary Committee insisted that the hearing was not about impeachment of President Bush but a chance to charge him with all his impeachable "high crimes and misdemeanors."
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He has repeatedly introduced a resolution to the floor to impeach Bush and his vice president, Dick Cheney, whose terms would expire in January, 2009.
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"The decision before us is whether to demand accountability for one of the gravest injustices imaginable," Kucinich told the hearing.
However, the committee chairman, John Conyers, made it clear "to the regret of many, this is not an impeachment hearing," but about executive power and its constitutional limitations, which as he listed include "the politicization of the Department of Justice, the misuse of signing statements, the misuse of authority with regard to detention, interrogation and rendition, possible manipulation of intelligence regarding the Iraq war, improper retaliation against critics of the administration … and excessive secrecy."
On the other hand, Republicans in the committee expressed their suspicion at motives of the hearing.
"It seems that we are hosting an anger management class," said Representative Lamar Smith. "This hearing will not cause us to impeach the president; it will only serve to impeach Congress’s credibility."

