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Impeachable Offenses?

~ Examining the Case for Removal of the 45th President of the United States

Impeachable Offenses?

Tag Archives: precedent

An Obligation to Impeach?

02 Saturday Mar 2019

Posted by crosbysamuel in Articles, Uncategorized

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Akhil Reed Amar, campaign finance, constitution, High Crimes and Misdemeanors, House of Representatives, impeach, impeaching, Impeachment, insurance fraud, Jerrold Nadler, Michael Cohen, nancy pelosi, obligation, precedent, prosecutorial discretion, tax fraud

House Democrats are reportedly shying away from impeachment, even in light of Michael Cohen’s testimony, which may have implicated President Trump in acts of tax fraud, insurance fraud, and campaign finance violations. The New York times characterized the Dem’s approach to the impeachment inquiry as “a thousand cuts over a swing of the ax;” meaning a drawn out investigation has a greater chance of injuring Trump, by lowering his chance of reelection, than impeachment does, which could energize his base. However, the unwillingness to, at least doggedly, pursue impeachment, begs the question “is there an obligation to impeach?” Constitutional scholars have said no. Akhil Reed Amar wrote in his article On Impeaching Presidents, published in the wake of the Clinton Impeachment, about prosecutorial discretion in administering impeachment:

Article I, Section 2, of the Constitution gives the House the “power” to impeach, but imposes no duty to impeach. The Framers knew how to use the word “duty”–indeed they used it twice in Article II–and so there is no ambiguity here. House impeachment is about power, not duty–about choices, not obligations. Impeachment is never reducible to one question: Is the conduct in question impeachable? Instead it always also implicates a second question: Is it worth it? Just as a grand jury can legitimately decline to indict and a prosecutor may legitimately decline to prosecute as a matter of discretion– fairness concerns, resource constraints, bigger fish to fry, avoidance of undue harm to third parties–so too the new House may decide that the President and, more importantly, the nation have suffered enough. . . . The new House must be free to use this power as it sees fit. It is not a potted plant, and indeed enjoys greater democratic legitimacy than the lame-duck House that voted to impeach, contrary to the spirit of the people’s verdict in the November congressional election.

Regardless, Democrats should consider the value of precedent. Even if harming Trump’s chances of reelection has the same effect as his removal, it fails to set an example for future congressmen.

aeb39ce2-3c72-4653-8f31-900ad2bcbd3f-AP_Trump.jpgEvan Vucci, AP

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The Right to Cross-Examine

29 Friday Sep 2017

Posted by crosbysamuel in Articles, Uncategorized

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chief justice, cross-examine, house of representative, Impeachment, precedent, sereno

Chief Justice Sereno, of the Supreme Court of the Philippines, is facing impeachment proceedings. The Filipino impeachment process is similar to that of the United States: impeachment is passed in the House of Representatives and tried in the Senate. Because the impeachment proceedings of the United States and the Philippines are so similar, it is possible precedent set by one system, could influence the other.

One such opportunity for shared precedent has been presented by an appeal of Chief Justice Sereno; summarized in this article. Sereno has claimed that she has the right to cross-examine witnesses used a resources in the House of Representatives. Her claim is a departure from the traditional impeachment process: cross-examiniation occurs during the trial in the Senate. Therefore the outcome of her claim could prove to be an interesting development for the Philippines and possibly the United States.

sereno1-0809-620x349.jpgPHILIPPINE DAILY INQUIRER / RAFFY LERMA

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Could Sessions be Impeached?

17 Sunday Sep 2017

Posted by crosbysamuel in Articles, Uncategorized

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dishonesty, Obstruction of Justice, precedent, russian collusion, senate judiciary committee, sessions

This opinion piece, which appeared this morning in the Capital Times, suggests that Attorney General Jeff Sessions may be vunerable to impeachment due to the dishonest testimony he gave to the Senate Judiciary Committee. If impeachment proceedings were pursued against Sessions, it could increase the vunerability of President Trump in two ways: 1) by making Sessions an ally in the Russian collusion investigation, and 2) by creating precedent for impeaching Trump himself.

jeff sessions.jpgMolly Riley/Getty Images

 

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The History of Impeachment

07 Friday Jul 2017

Posted by crosbysamuel in Articles, Uncategorized

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constitution, history, precedent

Click here to read a discussion of the historical precedent for impeachment.

nixon.jpgtonynetone/Flickr

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Blog Owner

Frank O. Bowman, III


Floyd R. Gibson Missouri Endowed Professor of Law
University of Missouri School of Law

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  • Defining Impeachable Conduct
  • Impeachment on Foreign Policy Grounds
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  • Obstruction of Justice
  • Abuse of Criminal Investigative Authority
  • Election Law Violations
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  • Lying as an Impeachable Offense
  • Abuse of Pardon Power
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  • The Mueller Investigation
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