Those who pressed to impeach Johnson did believe they had evidence of a crime. — frank
There is no precedent in the US for what you're describing. — frank
They had evidence that he disgraced Congress and the Presidency which they decided to be impeachable offences. And tim wood is saying that we have evidence that Trump is violating his oath of office, which is apparently an impeachable offence — Michael
The House's primary charge against Johnson was violation of the Tenure of Office Act, passed by the U.S. Congress in March 1867 — Wiki
And tim wood is saying that we have evidence that Trump is violating his oath of office,
— Michael
Tim is wrong. — frank
Shutting down the government is not a violation of his oath? — tim wood
I remember it well. For almost two years an amazing headline almost every day!You all may not have been around for the Watergate hearings, — Bitter Crank
What will be needed for impeachment is the ability of the House Democrats to successfully carry out the proceedings, so well that the Senate would be compelled to try and convict. I wouldn't hold my breath. — Bitter Crank
Shutting down the government is not a violation of his oath?
"I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will faithfully execute the Office of President of the United States, and will to the best of my Ability, preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States." — tim wood
https://www.britannica.com/topic/tyrant
Tyrant, Greek tyrannos, a cruel and oppressive ruler or, in ancient Greece, a ruler who seized power unconstitutionally or inherited such power. In the 10th and 9th centuries BCE, monarchy was the usual form of government in the Greek states. The aristocratic regimes that replaced monarchy were by the 7th century BCE themselves unpopular. Thus, the opportunity arose for ambitious men to seize power in the name of the oppressed. — Britannica
How Media Giants Are Profiting from Donald Trump's Ascent - Fortune
fortune.com › Entertainment › Election 2016
Mar 21, 2016 - Media giants have benefitted from the Trump ascent and the presidential circus. ... Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump. ... There has been much debate over the media's relationship with Donald Trump. ... news media is not the culprit for Trump's ascent and that networks like his own are simply ... — Fortune
Bitter Crank
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↪Michael ↪frank ↪tim wood Richard Nixon was impeached for "obstruction of justice, abuse of power, and contempt of Congress" while Bill Clinton was impeached for "perjury and obstruction of justice".
You all may not have been around for the Watergate hearings, but the proceedings were broadcast (for weeks on end) and the process of evidence gathering was extensive. By the time Nixon resigned, the case against had been very well built.
Operatives in Nixon's Committee to Reelect the President (aka CREEP) burglarized the Democratic National Committee offices in the Watergate hotel. What followed was an elaborate cover-up, proving again that covering up a relatively minor crime can self-inflate into a major disaster. Another thing that has been proved is that once investigators start digging, remarkable finds can be brought to the surface.
I think we can count on sufficient evidence being available to impeach President Trump. What will be needed for impeachment is the ability of the House Democrats to successfully carry out the proceedings, so well that the Senate would be compelled to try and convict. I wouldn't hold my breath. — Bitter Crank
There's no Constitutional requirement that a President sign every appropriations bill that crosses his desk. Nor is there any Constitutional requirement that congress only pass bills that the President is willing to sign. — yazata
This is as close to a public forum, or space, as some of us will get. Trump has apparently tweeted, "No wall, no government." To me this is a crystal clear violation of his oath of office. — tim wood
Is this the substance of your post? I read into it - tell me if I misread - that the parties share blame if they cannot come together. As if one one view were X, the other Z, and there exists some mean Y such that XY=Z - and I would agree that this seems reasonable between persons arguing in good faith. But does Trump do anything in good faith? He does not. Where then is your mean; what is it?Does that oath require Congress to provide a budget to the President that he'll agree to sign?
It seems if two parties can't come to terms, there's equal blame from both. Does everyone get impeached when there's an impasse? — Hanover
You cannot tell any difference between Obama and Trump, and the Republican congress and Democrat congress? Do you think Chuck Schumer just is Mitch McConnell? — tim wood
Can you say Merritt Garland? McConnell in betraying his oath to the US in favour of his commitment to his own interests, where they intersected with so-called Republican interests, betrayed his oath and his country. Do a little research.Mitch McConnell is an honorable man as far as I can tell. — frank
After weighing it up, I think I'm against impeachment for the practical reason that it would lead to Pence becoming president, and for the ideological reason of opposing his political views - even more so than the current president's. — S
...a multi-billion dollar moron useless erection... — Hanover
wackdoodle — tim wood
Pence is worse than Trump? Pence may have flaws - no doubt he does - but do you aver he is a bad man? Think about the full spectrum - width, breadth, and depth - of Trump's badness: does Pence compare at all? My answer: I don't think he compares at all. Maybe one problem: can he withstand the pressure from the wackdoodle right. Mother's milk to Trump; maybe not to Pence. — tim wood
How would you define "useless erection"? — Metaphysician Undercover
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