'He’s just absolutely ignoring the Constitution': Republican Representative says there's 'probably' enough votes in the House to impeach Obama

Republican Rep. Lou Barletta said Monday that President Barack Obama would 'probably' lost an impeachment vote in the House of Representatives

'He’s just absolutely ignoring the Constitution, and ignoring the laws and ignoring the checks and balances,' the Pennsylvania lawmaker told a local radio host



After the Democratic National Committee attacked Barletta, his communications direction revised and extended the congressman's comments and said that Barletta thinks taking a vote to impeach the president would be 'harmful'

‘Could that pass the House? Probably. Would the Senate ever convict? Certainly not,' he said on behalf of his boss

President Barack Obama has acted so unlawfully that he 'probably' wouldn't survive an impeachment vote in the House of Representatives, Republican Rep. Lou Barletta told a radio host on Monday.



'He’s just absolutely ignoring the Constitution, and ignoring the laws and ignoring the checks and balances,' the Pennsylvania lawmaker told News Radio 910 WSBA personality Gary Sutton yesterday.



'The problem is, what do you do?' Barletta continued. 'For those that say impeach him for breaking the laws or bypassing the laws — could that pass in the House? It probably could.'

Rep. Lou Barletta, pictured here in 2011, told a radio host yesterday that President Barack Obama 'probably' wouldn't survive an impeachment vote in the House of Representatives

'Is the majority of the American people in favor of impeaching the president? I’m not sure about that.'

'I don't think so,' the Pennsylvania radio host can be heard telling Barletta in audio of their conversation captured by Buzzfeed's Andrew Kaczyinski.



Barletta made the comments during a discussion on illegal immigration after Sutton argued that the president wasn't 'faithfully executing the laws of this country.'



'Well we have a president that has taken this to a new level,' Barletta said of Obama's actions before explaining how he thinks impeachment proceeding would hypothetically play out in the House.

After the interview Democratic National Committee spokesman Ian Sams told a Pennsylvania newspaper that 'while Republicans are confident a political vote as outrageous and ill-founded as this could pass, let’s not forget all the commonsense initiatives they refuse to even bring up for a vote.'

The GOP ought to be focusing its efforts on passing legislation that would reform the country's immigration system, raise the minimum wage and make equal pay for women a legal requirement,

Sams told the Wilkes-Barre Times Leader in an email.



'Republicans in the House are clearly committed to playing politics and relying on outrageous rhetoric instead of doing the job they were elected to do – standing up for the interests of the American people,' he wrote.

In the same article Barletta’s communications director, Tim Murtaugh, is quoted as saying his boss was not 'advocating or proposing' that the House impeach Obama.



The congressman was merely relating one proposed way Congress could stop the president's ' consistent disregard for the law,' Murtaugh said.



His 'full answer is this: ‘Could that pass the House? Probably. Would the Senate ever convict? Certainly not.'

'There’s not the will nationally to remove the president, so would it be wise to pursue that? Or would it be harmful to the country? Surely the latter,' Murtaugh said.



'He's just absolutely ignoring the Constitution, and ignoring the laws and ignoring the checks and balances,' Barletta said of the president, who is pictured here in Pittsburgh this morning

In the radio interview on News Radio 910 WSBA, Barletta also cast aspersions on politicians who are perceived as abandoning their constituents.



The embarrassing blow former House Majority Leader and Virginia Congressman Eric Cantor suffered last week when he lost his primary election would be the fate of other elected leaders across the country if they don't shape up, Barletta predicted.



'If they don't feel that you're standing up for them, then they're gonna throw you out, and they're gonna throw somebody else in,' Barletta said.

Cantor became the first sitting House Majority Leader to get kicked out of office since the position was created when he lost the Republican primary for his congressional seat a week ago today to a political novice he trounced in spending.

Conservatives in Cantor's state denounced the seven-term representative after the election as being a power-hungry jet setter who had lost touch with the needs of his district.