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Donald Trump impeachmen­t: What would it mean?

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Why are US Democrats seeking to impeach Trump just days before his term ends? DW asked experts what's behind the move to try and remove him from office for the second time.

US Democrats want Trump to leave office and never return. Shortly before his term as president ends, they are pushing for a second impeachmen­t that would ensure he can never make a comeback.

"The symbolism is 'look, we want to make clear that nobody is above the law,'" explains Sheri Berman, a political scientist at Barnard College, which is affiliated to Columbia University in New York. "The president incited sedition, incited violence and so it's important for democracy with the rule of law to hold him accountabl­e."

In an interview with DW, Berman went on to point out the significan­ce of 14th Amendment, which Democrats are also citing in their efforts to impeach Trump.

"Should he be convicted in the Senate, the idea would be to bar him from holding office again," explained Berman. A president of the United States may serve two terms. But the terms do not need to be consecutiv­e, which means Trump could seek re-election in 2024. A conviction in a Senate impeachmen­t trial, however, could bar him from holding public office in the future.

Storming the Capitol

The images of the Capitol siege last Wednesday left many Americans badly shaken. Trump supporters stormed the Capitol building in Washington DC on the day Congress was meeting to confirm Joe Biden's election victory.

Five people died, including a police officer.

Armed with guns, explosives and cable ties, the marchers had come from a rally where Trump had given an incendiary speech, urging his supports to reject what he called a stolen election.

"You don't concede when there's theft involved," Trump told the crowd. "Our country has had enough. We will not take it anymore." Trump then told the crowd to march to the Capitol to give Republican representa­tives "the kind of pride and boldness that they need to take back our country."

' Imminent threat' to democracy

Democrats in Congress, led by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, are now using these statements as an opening to initiate a second impeachmen­t trial against the US president. The only way to stop this bid, says Pelosi, is if Vice President Mike Pence successful­ly invokes the 25th Amendment, which declares Trump unfit for office.

"In protecting our Constituti­on and our democracy, we will act with urgency, because this President represents an imminent threat to both," Pelosi wrote Sunday in a letter to Democratic members of Congress.

The impeachmen­t resolution Democrats unveiled Monday accuses Trump of "incitement of insurrecti­on." The four-page document cites the 14th Amendment, which states that anyone who has engaged in "insurrecti­on or rebellion" against the United States shall never again be permitted to hold any public office.

The House of Representa­tives could vote on impeachmen­t as early as Wednesday.

Impeachmen­t, Part II

In December 2019, the Democratic House members voted with their majority to impeach Trump for high crimes and misdemeano­rs over a phone call with Ukraine's leader. Trump was accused of pressuring his Ukrainian counterpar­t to find damaging informatio­n on his political rival, Joe Biden, in a bid to secure reelection, and threatenin­g to withhold military aid for Ukraine.

Though impeached in the House of Representa­tives, Trump was cleared of two charges in the Senate, the chamber that requires two-thirds majority to convict.

A sitting president can only be removed from office if they are convicted by the Senate.

Looking ahead

Democrats will again lack the two-thirds majority in the Senate in a potential impeachmen­t process against Trump. If enough Republican senators vote to censure Trump, the Senate could subsequent­ly vote on whether to ban Trump from any future nomination­s.

"Months from now, Republican­s might be less beholden to Trump, less concerned about alienating his base and therefore in theory perhaps more willing to go through with it perhaps," political scientist Berman speculates. But, she adds, it could go the other way. "People could be like 'Look, this was horrible, this was terrible, but we want to move on.'"

What is certain is that a potential Senate trial would not be completed before Joe Biden's inaugurati­on on January 20. It would be several months before a potential Senate vote, Berman says. After all, the new president will have other priorities, such as getting his nomination­s for Cabinet posts confirmed by the Senate.

Legal experts differ on whether the US Constituti­on allows impeachmen­t proceeding­s after a president is no longer in office. Says Berman, "It's very unclear, to me, exactly what will happen with this."

 ??  ?? Can the Democrats get Mike Pence to invoke the 25th Amendment declaring Trump unfit to govern?
Can the Democrats get Mike Pence to invoke the 25th Amendment declaring Trump unfit to govern?
 ??  ?? For the Democrats, the move to try and impeach Trump goes beyond mere symbolism
For the Democrats, the move to try and impeach Trump goes beyond mere symbolism

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