Firing
Trump takes center stage as Democrats reclaim House majority:
California congressman files article of impeachment on Day One
claiming president obstructed justice by giving James Comey the axe
- Rep. Brad Sherman introduced the same article of impeachment he filed in 2017 when just one other lawmaker co-sponsored the measure
- Just 19 House Democrats have co-sponsored impeachment bills during the Trump presidency
- Beginning on Thursday their party has a House majority with the power to take the first step toward removing the president from office
- It's unlikely the Republican-controlled Senate would ever vote to kick Trump out of the Oval Office
3
January, 2018
A
California Democratic congressman used his party's first day
controlling the House of Representatives to file an impeachment
resolution against President Donald Trump.
Rep.
Brad Sherman introduced an identical bill in 2017, charging that
Trump obstructed justice when he fired FBI Director James Comey just
months after moving into the White House.
The
resolution accuses Trump of 'threatening, and then terminating' Comey
because he knew the FBI was investigating then-National Security
Advisor Michael Flynn and 'conducting one or more investigations into
Russian state interference in the 2016 campaign.'
Sherman
told the Los Angeles Times that 'there is no reason' Congress
shouldn't consider impeachment: 'Every day, Donald Trump shows that
leaving the White House would be good for our country.'
Ohio
Republican Rep. Jim Jordan confirmed that Sherman had filed his bill,
tweeting: 'We knew they couldn’t help themselves. Rep. Sherman
files articles of impeachment on the President. Dems are more focused
on stopping Trump than building the Wall and helping the country.'
Newly
installed House Speaker Nancy Pelosi told the 'TODAY' show this week
that she doesn't want to see an impeachment 'for political reasons,'
but cautioned that politics also won't prevent her from calling a
vote if it's justified.
Sherman
is one of three House Democrats to introduce articles of impeachment
against Trump during his first two years in office.
His
July 2017 effort attracted just one co-sponsor, Texas Democrat Al
Green.
Green
filed his own impeachment resolution in January 2018, including among
Trump's 'high crimes and misdemeanors' his decision to ban
transgender troops from the American military, his travel ban
affecting Muslim-majority countries and his claim that 's***hole
countries' send the U.S. too many immigrants.
No
one co-sponsored the measure, which was seen as a publicity stunt.
Tennessee
Democratic Rep. Steve Cohen introduced the most ambitious impeachment
bid in November 2017. Seventeen other Demorats co-sponsored it. But
like the others, it languished in the Judiciary Committee without a
vote.
Cohen
accused Trump of obstruction of justice in firing Comey, but piled on
four other charges.
One
impeachment article accused the president of profiting from foreign
participation in his businesses, in violation of the Constitution's
'emoluments clause.' Another claimed Trump broke the law by spending
taxpayer funds at his own resorts and golf courses.
Other
articles accused him of undermining the federal judiciary by
targeting judges for public tongue-lashings, and of stifling freedom
of the press with persistent complaints about 'fake news' outlets.
It's
unclear how willing Democrats will be to flex their muscles in the
most aggressive wasy possible.
A
Politico/Morning Consult poll in November found that just 33 per cent
of voters want Trump impeached. But 61 per cent of Democrats are
eager to see it in 2019.
A
December Harvard CAPS/Harris poll found 39 per cent of voters want to
see the president fired.
The
new Congress will feature the largest number of progressive lawmakers
in many years, and they appear to be in no mood to appease a
president who is standing firm on his pursuit of funding for a wall
on the southern border with Mexico.
Democrats
will pounce on Day One, moving legislation to end a partial
government shutdown, and a separate measure to protect medical
insurance coverage for people with pre-existing conditions.
Republicans
still maintain control of the Senate.
Even
if Democrats believe some of Trump's actions, including Trump's
reported hush money payments to women during the 2016 campaign, clear
the threshold of 'high crimes and misdemeanors,' impeachment would
represent a steep uphill climb.
Should
the House vote to impeach Trump, removing him from office would be
even more difficult.
Two-thirds
of the Senate would need to vote to convict him. That's highly
unlikely unless more than a dozen Republicans turn on him.
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