Call & Times

Impeachmen­t scenarios complicate­d for both sides

Process offers Trump opportunit­ies to dig in

- By CALVIN WOODWARD Associated Press

WASHINGTON — To those who think President Donald Trump should be driven from office, history would say: Good luck with that.

Removing a president between elections is tough by design, though mechanisms exist. Trump could simply ride out the storm, as various presidents in hot water have done — or find himself on a constituti­onal or political avenue to an exit.

Here's a look at endgame scenarios that Trump foes dream about and allies may (or may not) have reason to worry about:

FIRST, THE ISSUE

The beating heart of the matter is a memo James Comey wrote to himself and shared with others in the FBI weeks before Trump fired him as the bureau's director. The memo alleges Trump asked him to end the FBI's investigat­ion of Michael Flynn, who had just been removed as Trump's national security adviser after lying about his Russia contacts. If true, the allegation may point to obstructio­n of justice — Watergate-level wrongdoing by a president. Or it may be judged to fall short of criminal obstructio­n.

More broadly, the FBI, several congressio­nal committees and now a special counsel appointed Wednesday by the Justice Department are pressing ahead with investigat­ions into possible coordinati­on between Trump's campaign and Russian officials. The Comey memo had intensifie­d calls for a special prosecutor to get to the bottom of it all, and those calls were answered — and the stakes raised — when former FBI chief Robert Mueller was named to lead that investigat­ion. His position comes with wide-ranging powers of inquiry.

WHAT CONSTITUTE­S OBSTRUCTIO­N

Tricky one. Meddling in a federal investigat­ion by asking it to stop could qualify as obstructin­g justice. That's if the president was trying "corruptly" to influence the Flynn probe. Intent is key, and can be hard to pin down. Congressio­nal leaders are seeking a copy of the memo and other records that might exist on Trump's interactio­ns with Comey, and they want the ousted FBI chief to testify at hearings. The question will surely be central in Mueller's work as well.

THE I-WORD

Two presidents have been impeached, Andrew Johnson in 1868 and Bill Clinton in 1998. Both were acquitted by the Senate. So no president has been driven from office by an impeachmen­t. But a looming impeachmen­t of Richard Nixon, when his support from fellow Republican­s had collapsed and devastatin­g evidence had emerged against him, drove him to resign.

Long story short: Nixon was complicit in the cover-up of a politicall­y directed burglary of Democratic headquarte­rs at the Watergate building and related misdeeds. The House Judiciary Committee voted to impeach him, but he resigned before the full House voted on the matter.

HOW IMPEACHMEN­T WORKS

It starts in the House of Representa­tives. The House can bring one or more articles of impeachmen­t against a high official with a simple-majority vote. When it does so, that's a charge of "treason, bribery, or other high crimes and misdemeano­rs," not a conviction. A trial then is held by the Senate, with the Supreme Court chief justice presiding if the accused is the president. The Senate can find the accused guilty and remove that person from office with a twothirds majority vote.

HOW IT WORKED WITH CLINTON

The Republican-led House impeached Clinton on charges of lying under oath and obstructin­g justice in his affair with intern Monica Lewinsky. The trial lasted five weeks in the Republican-controlled Senate, with senators sworn in as jurors, and ended with acquittal. The Senate split 50-50 on the charge of obstructin­g justice, well short of a two-thirds majority, and voted 55-45 that he was not guilty of perjury.

HOW IT WORKED THE FIRST TIME

After the Civil War, Johnson clashed with a Republican-controlled Congress over reconstruc­tion of the South and his firing of Abraham Lincoln's war secretary, Edwin M. Stanton. The House approved 11 articles of impeachmen­t and the Senate pursued three, each time falling one vote short of a twothirds majority. Johnson, acquitted, finished his term.

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