In practical terms, an impeachment would mean he could not serve in any other federal elective or appointive office. |
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What were the most salient features of the impeachment crisis and its most important political lessons? |
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On Monday, senators took their oaths as jurors before the Supreme Court's chief justice for Brown's impeachment trial. |
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He charmed the man, whom many thought was going to conduct an investigation that would lead to the President's impeachment. |
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Following their cheerleading during impeachment, they were firmly in the party camp this fall. |
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The government responded by preparing an impeachment motion against the chief justice. |
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After the panel voted positively on four articles, impeachment was inevitable and a Senate vote for the president's removal seemed likely. |
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It is a tenet of impeachment law that we don't impeach judges for their decisions, but rather for conduct which makes them unfit to serve. |
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There has been for some time evidence available sufficient to warrant impeachment on each of these grounds. |
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The impeachment was spawned by an accusation by his estranged drinking and gambling buddy. |
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It did not really occur to them that a speaker might rise to become the ultimate beneficiary on the impeachment of the governor and his deputy. |
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It is not clear what resulted from the demands for impeachment of the union leadership. |
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Their three colleagues now urged them to resign to avoid the impeachment which seemed destined otherwise to follow. |
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It led to the impeachment of the state's attorney general and auditor and conviction of the Treasurer. |
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A front-page editorial in the Chicago Tribune called for immediate impeachment proceedings against the President. |
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The two men were warned by the government that they faced impeachment if they didn't step down. |
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They escaped impeachment only by making a very large loan to the Parliament at a crucial stage. |
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I was discussing the finer points of impeachment, and votes of no confidence. |
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Under Malawian law, the vice-president automatically takes power once the office is vacant through death, incapacitation or impeachment. |
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But impeachment is an extreme step which must only be considered for the most grievous wrongdoing. |
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Under Indonesia's complex impeachment rules, three months must elapse before a second censure motion can be passed. |
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He is already facing impeachment over claims that he misused public money and abused his office since coming to power a year ago. |
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The lawmaker struck the sergeant-at-arms as House members were trying to silence impeachment supporters in the gallery before the scuffle. |
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But the Constitution also provides for impeachment, and some pushback against judicial power is a good thing. |
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There is complete security of tenure for the judges, with Supreme Court and High Court judges being removable only through impeachment. |
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If the U.S. were an effective democracy, the President would face impeachment and removal from office. |
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In 1991, he prorogued parliament in order to block an impeachment motion against him. |
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This inhibition is to a large extent based on the Bill of Rights and the consequent bar to the impeachment of proceedings in Parliament. |
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He became the impeachment maven even though he had no clear expertise related to the questions at hand. |
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The panel considering impeachment heard from its first witnesses today, some of whom criticized the governor's conduct in years past. |
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The president's substantial majority in the legislature ensured that any impeachment motion would fail. |
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Or was his presidency just a series of transient, small-bore initiatives overshadowed by his impeachment? |
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The proposed impeachment bill was based on legal procedures and passed in a National Assembly vote. |
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The impeachment process would take more than a year, I'm sure, with the neocons clinging like rabid bulldogs to the seat of power. |
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Regarding the impeachment case, Park should listen to the public opinion and voices from GNP members in rebellion. |
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She does not face the possibility of impeachment, nor may she be voted out of office. |
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This is what forces the GOP to nuclear options like constitutional amendments, violent demagoguery and impeachment. |
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Moreover, without any credible justification, they have even gone so far as to call for impeachment proceedings against him. |
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Forty years after Richard Nixon resigned from office, talk of impeachment is once again in the air. |
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There would be indignant House Judiciary Committee hearings and angry talk of impeachment among some Republicans. |
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But, in the absence of unlikely impeachment procedures, a substantial pay-off appears to be the only real option open to the Government to encourage the judge to resign. |
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More importantly, neither Iran-Contra nor impeachment were enough to dampen public affection for either president. |
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It requires something on the scale of an earthquake, which is why impeachment talk is so tantalizing. |
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He called for the impeachment of him and other members of the court. |
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He fell from power in 1667 and fled to France to avoid impeachment. |
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I presume most Republicans will be clever enough to mute impeachment talk before November. |
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Republican leaders today are doing the same thing, using the media to tell their members there will be no impeachment. |
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They found that a prosecutor's detailed, negative impeachment of the character witness outweighed that of the witness's positive character evidence. |
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The impeachment issue is driving campaign narratives even in the relatively liberal precincts of New England. |
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The impeachment failed despite his apparent guilt on some of the charges. |
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From impeachment logic to immigration geography, yet another week in far-out theories from our fearless leaders. |
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He quoted from a Politico article noting that Democrats are talking impeachment up while Republicans are denying it. |
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In Washington, the conversation about impeachment is preceded by a conversation about a conversation about impeachment. |
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The first part of his letter was a palpable impeachment of the ministry. |
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Now, alongside possible impeachment, Hall may face criminal charges as a result of his probe. |
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First came the impeachment, the nuclear option of partisan warfare. |
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In the impeachment complaint, Estrada has been charged with bribery, graft and corruption, betrayal of public trust and culpable violation of the Constitution. |
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But travel outside the beltway, and the conversation about impeachment is far from abstract. |
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The Democrats were able to sideline Kucinich and avoid a divisive impeachment battle. |
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He has threatened to call for the impeachment of the president. |
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If they get dragged down with this, they will lose their seats, maybe control of Congress, and if that happens, impeachment talk goes from forlorn hope to a bill. |
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But an absence of niceties nor an unwillingness to conform is not a legitimate cause for impeachment. |
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The impeachment, nonperson in 2000, and now his unapproval rate is at 27 percent. |
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In the process, both the procedure of impeachment and the office of the Speaker were created. |
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The controversy eventually led to Laud's impeachment for treason by a bill of attainder in 1645, and subsequent execution. |
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The impeachment was the first since 1459 without the king's official sanction in the form of a bill of attainder. |
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Strafford's impeachment provided a new departure for Irish politics whereby all sides joined together to present evidence against him. |
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Formerly, the House of Lords constituted a court in certain trials, including trials of peers of the realm and impeachment cases. |
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Originally, the House of Lords held that it could try peers only upon impeachment. |
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For instance, in the United States, the President may not issue pardons in cases of impeachment. |
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In September 2016 this law was revoked by Michel Temer after impeachment of Dilma Rousseff. |
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His interaction with the British dominion of India began well before Hastings' impeachment trial. |
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For two decades prior to the impeachment, Parliament had dealt with the Indian issue. |
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This campaign of moderation versus zealotry, peaked in 1709 during the impeachment trial of high church preacher Henry Sacheverell. |
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The current president is Michel Temer, who replaced Dilma Rousseff after her impeachment. |
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Articles of impeachment were presented against him two months later, but he was dismissed on bail. |
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Though subject to the process of impeachment, only one Justice has ever been impeached and no Supreme Court Justice has been removed from office. |
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The president is removed on impeachment for, and conviction of, treason, bribery, or other high crimes and misdemeanors. |
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Trials of peers in the House of Lords were abolished in 1948, and impeachment is obsolete, so this is unlikely to occur again. |
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Fernando Collor de Mello, the 32nd President of Brazil, resigned in 1992 amidst impeachment proceedings. |
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In 2016, the Chamber of Deputies initiated an impeachment case against President Dilma Rousseff on allegations of budgetary mismanagement. |
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The impeachment procedure is regulated in Article 61 of the Basic Law for the Federal Republic of Germany. |
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Other than impeachment, no other penalty can be given to the President for the violation of the Constitution. |
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In the Republic of Ireland formal impeachment only applies to the Irish president. |
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In April, Gutierrez resigned prior to the Senate's convening as an impeachment court. |
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In Polish law there is no impeachment procedure defined, as it is present in the other countries. |
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In the United Kingdom, it is the House of Commons that holds the power of initiating an impeachment. |
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The member must support the charges with evidence and move for impeachment. |
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This began as impeachment proceedings, but then became a different procedure as a bill of pains and penalties. |
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Impeachment with respect to political office should not be confused with witness impeachment. |
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However, after initially hearing his impeachment, charges were dismissed for lack of jurisdiction. |
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In the case of the impeachment of a president, the Chief Justice of the United States presides over the proceedings. |
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First, only a person holding an office of honor, an office of trust, or an office of profit, is subject to impeachment and removal from office. |
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It could have neither, with the president preoccupied by Watergate and the Congress concerned with impeachment, he said. |
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Yet in most instances, the threat of impeachment effectively checked lawbreaking, irresponsible, or incompetent executives. |
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A number of South American countries have reacted angrily to the impeachment of Paraguayan President Fernando Lugo, calling it a coup. |
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In 2006, a number of MPs attempted to revive the custom, having signed a motion for the impeachment of Tony Blair, but this was unsuccessful. |
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Any Yingluck impeachment would have been heard in the upper house. |
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He intends to use the SOTU message as nothing more that another Hollywood stunt similar to the pep rally he had on the WH lawn after the impeachment vote. |
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The House of Representatives must first pass, by a simple majority of those present and voting, articles of impeachment, which constitute the formal allegation or allegations. |
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The central question regarding the Constitutional dispute about the impeachment of members of the legislature is whether members of Congress are officers of the United States. |
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The election court has some of the powers associated with impeachment cases in other countries, and can remove elected officials from office in the case of electoral fraud. |
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However, it is argued by some that the remedy of impeachment remains as part of British constitutional law, and that legislation would be required to abolish it. |
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After the reign of Edward IV, impeachment fell into disuse, the bill of attainder becoming the preferred form of dealing with undesirable subjects of the Crown. |
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Parliament has held the power of impeachment since medieval times. |
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The 1987 Philippine Constitution says the grounds for impeachment include culpable violation of the Constitution, bribery, graft and corruption, and betrayal of public trust. |
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If an impeachment attempt is unsuccessful or the official is acquitted, no new cases can be filed against that impeachable official for at least one full year. |
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To date no impeachment of an Irish president has ever taken place. |
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Hence, the provisions for impeachment have never been tested. |
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After the impeachment of the two obstructive tribunes, Caesar, perhaps unsurprisingly, faced no further opposition from other members of the Tribunician College. |
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As impeachment proceedings began, it became clear that the next two people in the order of succession have been implicated in the Petrobras scandal. |
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It functioned as a court of first instance for the trials of peers, for impeachment cases, and as a court of last resort within the United Kingdom. |
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James told Buckingham he was a fool, and presciently warned his son that he would live to regret the revival of impeachment as a parliamentary tool. |
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