Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Pelosi points to 25th Amendment

- By Lisa Mascaro J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP

Attempt could allow Congress to intervene to remove the president, ensure a continuity of government.

Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., speaks Friday at the Capitol in Washington.

WASHINGTON — House Speaker Nancy Pelosi unveiled legislatio­n Friday that would allow Congress to intervene under the 25th-Amendmentt­o the Constituti­on to remove the president, insisting it’s not about President Donald Trump but inspired by the need for greater congressio­nal oversight of his White House.

Pelosi has been raising questions about Trump’s mental fitness since his COVID-19 diagnosis and demanding more transparen­cy about his health. The billwould set up a commission to assess the president’s ability to lead the country and ensure a continuity of government. It comes one year after Pelosi’s House launched impeachmen­t proceeding­s against Trump.

“This is not about President Donald Trump — he will face the judgment of the voters,” Pelosi said at a press conference at the Capitol.

Just weeks before the Nov. 3 election, with no hopes of the bill becoming law, the rollout was quickly dismissed as a stunt by top allies.

“Absolutely absurd,” said Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell during an appearance in Shepherdsv­ille, Kentucky.

The president’s opponents have discussed invoking the 25th Amendment for some time, but are raising it now as the campaigns are fast turning into a referendum on Trump’s handling of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Pelosi said Trump needs to disclose more about his health after his COVID-19 diagnosis and when, exactly, he first contracted COVID as others in the White House have become infected. More than 213,000 Americans have died and millions more have tested positive for the virus, which shows no signs of abating heading into what public health experts warn will be a difficult flu season and winter.

The legislatio­n that would create a commission as outlined under the 25th Amendment, which was passed by Congress and ratified in 1967 as a way to ensure a continuity of power in the aftermath of President John F. Kennedy’s assassinat­ion.

It says the vice president and a majority of principal officers of the executive department­s “or of such other body as Congress” may by law provide a declaratio­n to Congress that the president “is unable to discharge the powers and duties of his office.” At that point, the vice president would immediatel­y assume the powers of acting president.

“Let Congress exert the power the Constituti­on gave us,” Pelosi said Friday.

Pelosi was joined by Rep. Jamie Raskin, D-Md., a constituti­onal scholar, who has proposed similar bills in the past.

“In times of chaos we must hold fast to our Constituti­on,” he said Friday.

Raskin said the commission would be launched “only for the most extreme situations.”

But, as Congress showed by impeaching — and acquitting the president over the past year — the legislativ­e branch is determined to exert itself at times as a check on the executive branch.

“Congress has a role to play,” Raskin said.

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