Rep. Anna Paulina Luna is moving to erase one of President Donald Trump’s first-term impeachments from history, arguing that new intelligence evidence proves the Russia-collusion narrative was a political fraud from the start.
Luna’s planned resolution targets Trump’s 2019 impeachment, the Ukraine-centered case Democrats brought during his first term.
Her argument leans on newly released intelligence material from Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard, which Luna says blows apart the premise of the case.
“I will be putting forward a resolution to void the fraudulent impeachment of President Trump during his first term in office. Russia collusion never happened,” Luna posted.
Democrats impeached Trump in 2019 after accusing him of using Ukraine-related pressure to seek investigations involving the Bidens before the 2020 race.
I will be putting forward a resolution to void the fraudulent impeachment of President Trump during his first term in office.
Russia collusion never happened. This has been proven by evidence released by ODNI Gabbard. It was a terrible lie that tore this country apart, and was…
— Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (@RepLuna) June 12, 2026
Luna argued that the country was ripped apart by claims she said should never have been treated as legitimate.
“It was a terrible lie that tore this country apart, and was plotted by a weaponized intelligence agency under [former President Barack] Obama,” she wrote.
“There is no monetary value that can be assigned to the damage this lie caused. It destroyed families’ relationships with one another, our country’s comradery [sic], and our relationship with another nuclear super power (Russia) that could have resulted in war.”
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She said the record should now be corrected. “Thank goodness the admin has started to restore that relationship, but HISTORY should reflect what actually transpired,” Luna continued.
Gabbard’s report framed the Trump-call investigation as the product of “politicized, manufactured narratives” from his opponents.
Gabbard is now exiting the DNI office, citing her husband’s diagnosis with cancer and the treatment ahead.
Trump wants Jay Clayton, the former Securities and Exchange Commission chairman, to replace her.
Luna’s move comes as Trump and his allies are pressing Congress to formally unwind the impeachments that defined his first term and the aftermath of Jan. 6.
In an interview with The Wall Street Journal, Trump cast the effort as Congress’ chance to repair what he calls a rigged political assault.
“It should be done because I did nothing wrong. It was a rigged deal—it was a whole rigged situation,” Trump said in the Journal interview.
The White House framed the push as payback for years of Democratic investigations and impeachment efforts.
“Trump-deranged Democrats have spent years launching phony attacks against the President and weaponizing the government against him,” Jackson said in the White House response.
“It’s no surprise that sane individuals are recognizing these sham efforts and are interested in undoing those shameful actions.”
Jackson closed by saying Trump’s attention remains on the public. “President Trump remains focused on one thing: doing what’s best for the American people.”
Speaker Mike Johnson has left the door wide open to expungement.
“I think it makes a lot of sense the more the evidence comes out, the more we know they really were sham impeachments,” Johnson told reporters, calling the effort “a priority and something Congress should make right.”
Rep. Darrell Issa had already put an expungement measure on the table in April with 23 GOP co-sponsors.
Johnson said Republicans were being vindicated by the emerging record.
“We were saying it at the time, now we know. And they make a very compelling case that it should be expunged from the record, because it was a hyperpartisan attack job,” Johnson said.
Trump, meanwhile, has been escalating his attacks on Democrats he believes would try to impeach him again if their party retakes the House.
Raskin became Trump’s main target Thursday night after conservative commentator Mark Levin urged Republicans to move against the Maryland Democrat.
“If Biden didn’t give him a pardon, he’d be in jail right now! Something should be done about people like this who do bad things, but always come up on the short end because of their illegal or unscrupulous behavior, and hurt our Country in the process,” Trump said.
He said he agreed with Levin and urged Congress to “EXPEL THE BUM.”
“Congress can never be great with people like this, who suffer massively from Trump Derangement Syndrome (TDS), casting their vote of HATE!”
Trump accused Raskin of obsessing over impeachment and predicted the Maryland Democrat would try again.
“Jamie Raskin, a Loser in Life, who worked endlessly during my First Term to impeach me, and failed miserably, wasting the Country’s money, time, and effort, will guaranteed be trying to do it again,” Trump wrote.
TRUMP: Calls for Jamie Raskin to be expelled, says he tried to impeach him during first term and that Biden pardon spared Al Green jail pic.twitter.com/1fZCbKFinF
— Trump Truths (@trumptruthsbot) June 11, 2026
Levin’s post accused Raskin of turning impeachment, the 14th Amendment and election objections into weapons against Trump.
“Jamie Raskin is already leading a plot to impeach the President if the Democrats take the House. He led the prior two impeachments against the President, has pushed for his resignation in the past, also was involved in twisting the 14th Amendment to ban candidate Trump from ballots, objected to electoral college votes for Trump in the first election, and was a member of the Pelosi January 6 Committee that, among other things, destroyed records before the GOP took over the House,” Levin posted.
Trump widened the blast to include Texas Democrat Al Green, another longtime impeachment antagonist.
“Al Green, who just lost his race in a landslide to an unknown candidate but, in my opinion, one that had more talent than Raskin. He spent time on the Unselect Committee of Political Hacks and Thugs, and was rebuffed on that, just as he has been rebuffed on Impeachment, and many other things,” Trump wrote.
The first impeachment cleared the House but died in the Senate, where Trump was acquitted in early 2020.
The Jan. 6 impeachment followed in 2021, ending with another Senate acquittal.
Trump’s hatred of the label goes back years: in 2019, he said the impeachment was a “dirty, filthy, disgusting word” and “giant presidential harassment.”
