ttystikk
Well-Known Member
Impeachment doesn’t remove a president from office; conviction on impeachment charges does. Just to be clear about the terminology:
Although no president has been removed from office, Nixon resigned under the threat of removal, and he probably would have been removed in the absence of his resignation.Remember the “smoking gun” tape on August 5, which proved that Nixon had sought to cover up the Watergate break-in. Facing a further collapse in his support, Nixon resigned four days later.
- Impeachment is the sole authority of the House of Representatives and requires a simple majority vote. Presidents Andrew Johnson and Bill Clinton were impeached by the House.
- The Senate then holds an impeachment trial and essentially acts as the jury, voting on whether or not to convict the president and remove him from office; it takes a two-thirds majority (67 of 100 votes) to do so. Neither Johnson nor Clinton was convicted by the Senate, although it came down to one vote in Johnson’s case. The Senate can also vote to bar an impeached president from holding office again.
Even so, that’s only 1 of 44 previous presidencies — and 1 of 57 previous presidential terms — to end in the president’s termination. Therefore, you might think the chance of Trump being removed from office is very low........
So, thinking it may happen might help you sleep better at night, but realistically believing it's actually going to happen is just a "pipe" dream!
I'm not sure that Impeachment and removal of the Chump is such a good idea, especially if led by Democrats. If he's out, that leaves Pence in, barring the results of the various investigations.Went from fake news to unlikely pretty quick, ya dumb racist.
The Chump is less effective than a seasoned political operator like Pence, who's more likely to be able to get things people on the left would not want.
So let the Republican Party take the lead in impeaching him. Damned if they do, damned by their association with his actions if they don't.