Trump slams Senate Republicans for going soft on Biden after ‘all these horrible revelations’ – including up to $40M in foreign payments to his family – that are being ‘undeniably proven’ in the House

Former President Trump accused Senate Republicans of treating President Biden softly amid the “terrible revelations” emerging from the Hunter Biden investigations, exposing the rift between the House GOP and the Senate.

“Joe Biden is the most corrupt president in the history of the United States, which is undeniably proven every day in the House of Representatives,” Trump wrote on Truth Social on Monday.

His post came after another New York Post report claimed that Hunter Biden would call his then vice president, father Joe Biden, into meetings with his foreign business partners.

But with all of these terrible revelations and facts, why hasn’t the Republican “leadership” in the Senate spoken out and reprimanded Crooked Joe Biden and the radical left Democrats, Fascists and Marxists for their criminal acts against our country, some of them against me. How long does America have to wait for the Senate to act?’ Trump added.

Trump accused Senate Republicans of treating President Biden softly amid the ‘terrible revelations’ emerging from the Hunter Biden investigations, exposing the rift between the House and Senate GOP

Hunter and Joe Biden are pictured together in April 2016. Joe served as Vice President from 2009-17

The House GOP has long been more pro-Trump than the Senate.

Devon Archer, the former business partner and friend of the first son, is expected to testify before the House Oversight Committee this week that the elder Biden attended meetings, both in person and by phone, with Hunter and his foreign business partners, even as Joe Biden has claimed he never discussed business dealings with his son.

It is not clear when Archer’s testimony will take place, as DailyMail.com learned that he has canceled scheduled appearances before the committee three times.

Archer is expected to tell the committee that Joe has spoken with Hunter’s business associates at least 24 times, including Burisma’s.

Archer and another business partner, Tony Bobulinski, have both said that Joe Biden offered short greetings and platitudes rather than concrete agreements with Hunter’s business partners.

But Archer’s testimony will further challenge the White House’s insistence that Joe Biden never had any knowledge or involvement in his wayward son’s business affairs.

Republicans on the House Oversight, Judiciary and Ways and Means Committees have set their sights on Hunter Biden’s business deals, as well as what they see as preferential treatment from the Justice Department.

Democrats control power in the upper chamber of Congress — so committees that investigate committees don’t investigate the Biden family. Yet the House is more pro-Trump than the Senate.

The former president broke up with Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell for years despite their close working relationship during the Trump administration — calling the Kentucky Republican “old crow.”

McConnell was sharply critical of Trump’s actions after the 2020 election.

But last week, Senator Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, joined the Oversight Committee in releasing the FD-1023 bomb — a document that contained details of an unverified tip alleging that both Hunter and Joe Biden each allegedly paid a $5 million bribe in exchange for policy decisions.

The Biden team has repeatedly denied any allegations.

Last week, an IRS whistleblower identified as Joseph Ziegler testified before the oversight committee that the Biden family had accepted more than $17 million in foreign payments.

Ziegler and IRS supervisor Gary Shapley testified before the House Oversight Committee that their investigation “supported misdemeanor and felony tax charges,” which were ultimately not filed against the president’s son, Hunter, due to political pressure.

Ziegler, a 13-year veteran of the IRS who was the lead attorney in the Hunter investigation, claimed the federal tax investigation into the president’s son had “supported misdemeanor and misdemeanor tax charges” — rather than just the misdemeanor tax charges that Hunter is scheduled to plead guilty next week as part of a deal that will allow him to avoid prosecution on a separate gun charge.

The former president broke up with Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell for years, despite their close working relationship during the Trump administration.

Devon Archer, far left, is playing golf in the Hamptons with Hunter Biden (far right) and Joe Biden (next to Hunter). Archer is expected to testify that Hunter put Joe on the phone with clients

The officers said under oath that U.S. Attorney David Weiss, the lead prosecutor for Hunter Biden, Washington, D.C., had asked U.S. Attorney Matthew Graves to file those charges. But after Graves refused, Weiss threw out the possible felony charges and entered a plea deal with the president’s son.

“I watched US Attorney [David] Weiss told a roomful of senior leaders from the FBI and IRS on Oct. 7, 2022, that he was not the deciding factor in whether or not to press charges,” Shapley said, contradicting Weiss’ previous public statements.

“If Delaware U.S. Attorney David Weiss followed DOJ policy, as he stated in his most recent letter, Hunter Biden should have been charged with a tax crime, not just the tax misdemeanor charge,” Ziegler said. “We must treat every taxpayer equally under the law.”

Members of the Biden family may have accepted more than $40 million from foreigners in exchange for making favorable policy decisions, oversight chairman James Comer, R-Ky., has previously claimed amid his committee’s ongoing investigation into the Bidens’ finances.

The countries giving the money are China, Romania and Ukraine.

“This was organized crime — there’s no other way to define it,” he claimed in an interview last month.

The chairman said his committee had identified “six specific policy decisions” where President Joe Biden acted and where the committee “cannot reach a conclusion” other than that the president was “compromised.”

At the time, Comer said he was confident his investigation would find evidence of “at least $17 million” in foreign payments, but would not be surprised if “transactions exceed $40 million.”

The chairman of the oversight committee also said his panel obtained further bank statements and reports of suspicious activity from the Treasury Department that showed “more bank accounts, more shell companies and more Bidens involved in an alleged policy pedal.”

The commission is expected to release those bank statements in the coming weeks.

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