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Former Member

House votes to send Trump impeachment articles to the Senate

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CNN)The House on Wednesday voted to approve the seven impeachment managers to prosecute the case against President Donald Trump, a long-awaited move that sends the action to the Senate and sets up the next phase of the impeachment fight.

The managers include both key players from the House's impeachment inquiry as well as a couple of surprise picks: Intelligence Chairman Adam Schiff of California, Judiciary Chairman Jerry Nadler of New York, Hakeem Jeffries of New York, Zoe Lofgren of California, Val Demings of Florida, Jason Crow of Colorado and Sylvia Garcia of Texas. Schiff, who led the House's Ukraine investigation, will serve as lead impeachment manager.
The House passed the resolution shortly after the managers were revealed on Wednesday to formally appoint the managers, allocate funding for the trial and send the articles of impeachment to the Senate, where senators will decide whether the President should be removed from office. The vote was approved mostly along party lines 228-193.
"As you can see from these descriptions, the emphasis is on litigators," Pelosi said in explaining how she chose the managers. "The emphasis is on comfort level in the courtroom. The emphasis is on making the strongest possible case to protect and defend our Constitution to seek the truth for the American people."
Wednesday's vote will kick off the ceremonial beginning of the Senate impeachment trial. Later Wednesday, the House will notify the Senate of the impeachment articles. On Thursday, House managers are expected to physically walk the articles to the Senate and read them aloud, according to a Republican leadership aide. The senators and Chief Justice John Roberts, who will preside over the trial, will also be sworn in, and the President will be officially summoned and given a time to respond to the charges.
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Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said the substance of the trial is likely to get underway on Tuesday, January 21.
Pelosi's announcement of the managers came four weeks after the House voted to impeach the President on two charges: abuse of power and obstruction of Congress. Following the approval of articles of impeachment, Pelosi took the unprecedented step to withhold sending the articles to the Republican-held Senate, saying she wanted to know more about the Senate trial parameters, creating uncertainty over the timeline for a trial and how it would unfold.
Pelosi and Schiff argued the delay has been effective in bringing new evidence to light.
"This time has given us the ability to show the American people the necessity of a fair trial to expose the degree to which McConnell is working hand in hand with the subject of impeachment, the President to essentially turn what should be a trial into a sham," Schiff said. "And that time has been I think very effective in not only bringing new evidence to light and the evidence was already overwhelming but also forcing senators to go on record."
Indeed, Schiff's committee on Tuesday released new evidence it had obtained from indicted Rudy Giuliani associate Lev Parnas, which included a letter showing Giuliani's outreach to the Ukrainian president and text messages between Parnas and Connecticut congressional candidate Robert Hyde appearing to show surveillance of former US Ambassador to Ukraine Marie Yovanovitch.
The White House continued to attack the Pelosi and the House over impeachment, and the President's legal team will soon be going toe-to-toe with the managers that Pelosi has appointed. The White House has yet to make a final decision about whether Republican House members will be part of the President's impeachment team, according to multiple sources.
"The Speaker lied when she claimed this was urgent and vital to national security because when the articles passed, she held them for an entire month in an egregious effort to garner political support," White House press secretary Stephanie Grisham said in a statement. "She failed and the naming of these managers does not change a single thing."
While Pelosi's press conference was in progress, Trump weighed in on Twitter: "Here we go again, another Con Job by the Do Nothing Democrats. All of this work was supposed to be done by the House, not the Senate!"
The way the Senate trial will ultimately unfold will depend on the full parameters for the trial, which have not been released yet. McConnell has said he's planning to follow the model of the 1999 impeachment trial of then-President Bill Clinton and decide on whether to include witnesses after opening arguments are made — and he has the votes to set the ground rules for the impeachment trial without Democrats' support.
The House managers are expected have a chance to argue their case before the full Senate, and after that, the President's lawyers will have an opportunity to present the defense. The opportunity to serve as an impeachment manager will offer a high-profile turn in the spotlight for the lawmakers who have been chosen and a chance to elevate their standing in Congress and with liberal voters.
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Pelosi has said she wanted a team of mangers that reflected the diversity of the Democratic caucus across racial, gender and geographic lines. Most but not all of the managers had legal backgrounds before coming to Congress. And the House team includes a mix of veterans like Lofgren — a staffer during President Richard Nixon's impeachment inquiry and a lawmaker for during President Bill Clinton's impeachment — as well as two freshmen Democrats.
"I'm very proud of the managers that we have," Pelosi said Wednesday. "I believe that they bring to this case in the United States Senate great patriotism, great respect for the constitution of the United States, great comfort level in a courtroom, great commitment, again, to the Constitution."
Some moderate Democrats wanted Pelosi to consider Michigan Rep. Justin Amash, the only conservative member of the House to support impeachment, as a manager. Democratic Rep. Dean Phillips of Minnesota told CNN he was "disappointed" Amash wasn't picked to join the prosecution.
"As an attorney, former Republican, and the only independent member of the House of Representatives, he has articulated the constitutional rationale for impeachment as well as anyone in Congress, and his absence is a missed opportunity for a bipartisan management team," Phillips said.
Conviction in the Senate would require a two-thirds vote, a high threshold that is not expected to be reached given that many Republican senators have been vocal in saying that they believe the President's actions do not rise to the level of impeachment.
But regardless of the outcome, the Senate trial will be a historic and momentous event.
The performance of the House managers will shape how a trial plays out and could be a way for those who are chosen to secure their place in history as part of the impeachment proceedings.
During the Clinton Senate impeachment trial, the managers took several days to present their arguments, followed by several days during which the Clinton legal team outlined their defense. That was followed by questions submitted in writing by senators directed to either the managers or the then-President's defense team.
There are no restrictions on the number of House impeachment managers the speaker can name to serve in the role.
In the Clinton trial, 13 House Republicans were chosen as impeachment managers.
Three are still serving in Congress to this day: Rep. Steve Chabot of Ohio, Rep. Jim Sensenbrenner of Wisconsin and Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, who was a representative of the state's third congressional district at the time of the Clinton impeachment.
This story has been updated with additional developments Wednesday.

Replies sorted oldest to newest

Bibi Haniffa posted:

Why is Nancy Pelosi dragging this out in an election year when they should be putting their energy into getting a good Presidential candidate?  The Dems are starting to look desperate that they think Trump will win.  Nancy showed her cards too early.  And if it turns out to be Trump vs. Elizabeth, then Cyat eat Nancy dinner.

Trump will eat Pocahontas alive and spit her out. He will kill her with the claim of Indian ancestry.

FM
skeldon_man posted:
Bibi Haniffa posted:

Why is Nancy Pelosi dragging this out in an election year when they should be putting their energy into getting a good Presidential candidate?  The Dems are starting to look desperate that they think Trump will win.  Nancy showed her cards too early.  And if it turns out to be Trump vs. Elizabeth, then Cyat eat Nancy dinner.

Trump will eat Pocahontas alive and spit her out. He will kill her with the claim of Indian ancestry.

That's why they are trying to get rid of him so badly. Why not vote him out at the poll? 

FM
Baseman posted:
ksazma posted:

Watch this woman. She is strong, convicted and knows how to deliver a prosecution. She will kick ass if there is a trial.

She looks like Volda Lawerence. Her pent up anger better served at the polls rather than attempting a Coup d’ etet. 

Banna , pay attention. She is a top class crime fighter, former Police Chief and State Prosecutor! One of the finest in Congress.

Vulga is DOO DOO compare to her!!

 

Nehru

While the Dems hold their dog-and-pony hoax show-and-tell jamboree of nothingness, Trump just signed a "big deal" trade agreement with China.

US LNG deal with China will throw $100 bil or more the US way and add 50,000 jobs in the US.  It will add another leg onto the US global energy dominance super-power. Guyana LNG might come into play.  In 2019 the Guyana finds exceeded all of Russia's new finds.

Agro will see major upsides and the Chinese will be well fed.  Left-for-dead fertilizer companies like Mosaic and Potash (Canada) already seeing optimism as Agro production ramps to feed 130 Crore Chinaman/women.

Trump held back some carrots in a quid-pro-quo deal will China.  Democrats, Impeach him for that too.

Trump is operating like a bruk-neck take-no-prisoner business man but still leaving something on the table for the other side.

Baseman
Last edited by Baseman
Baseman posted:

While the Dems hold their dog-and-pony hoax show-and-tell jamboree of nothingness, Trump just signed a "big deal" trade agreement with China.

US LNG deal with China will throw $100 bil or more the US way and add 50,000 jobs in the US.

Trump had to sign the deal with China to keep his head a tad above water.

China has the strong upper hand in this agreement.

FM
seignet posted:
Demerara_Guy posted:

Senate needs a two-thirds majority or more for conviction.

Previous impeachment trials for presidents -- Bill Clinton in December 1998 and Andrew Johnson in 1868 --  both ended with acquittal because there were not the needed votes.

Andrew JACKSON.

Andrew JOHNSON had an impeachment trial.

============================

Here’s what you need to know about the Presidents who have been impeached — and why they stayed in office.

Andrew Johnson

https://api.time.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/03/andrew-johnson.jpg?w=800&quality=85Lincoln's successor President Andrew Johnson of Tennessee.
PhotoQuest—Getty Images

Why was Johnson impeached?

The aftermath of the Civil War set the stage for the first impeachment of a U.S. President. After President Abraham Lincoln’s death, he was succeeded by his Vice President, Andrew Johnson.

Johnson was a pro-Union Democrat who had refused to secede from the Union along with his state, Tennessee, during the war. However, he was also a racist who favored a lenient approach to Reconstruction, the process of bringing the states of the Confederacy back into the nation. He clashed with Congress throughout his term, vetoing bills he felt were too harsh on the South — including the Freedmen’s Bureau Acts, which gave displaced southerners, including African Americans, access to food, shelter, medical aid and land.

This approach put him at odds with Congress. The final straw came when he replaced Secretary of War Edwin Stanton, a Lincoln appointee who sided with the Radical Republicans, a faction of the party that favored enfranchisement and civil rights for freed African Americans.

Congress produced 11 articles of impeachment, which alleged that Johnson had violated the Tenure of Office Act — a law intended to limit presidential power to remove federal appointees from office — and had found a replacement without consulting the Senate. Johnson was impeached by a two-thirds super majority of the House, and the case moved to the Senate for trial. Years later, the Supreme Court determined that the act was unconstitutional.

Why wasn’t Johnson removed from office?

When he was tried in the Senate, Johnson ultimately held onto his presidency by a single vote, after seven Republicans decided to vote with Senate Democrats to keep him in office.

Extract and source -- https://time.com/5552679/impeached-presidents/

FM
Last edited by Former Member
Sean posted:

Ow Bai. The Democrat hoax impeachment will be thrown out and dem going to cry long long tears. 

Sean, as much as we are on the same page on the impeachment, your views are too extreme to say it's a hoax and it should be thrown out. Hoax or not, the senate must treat this trial as if it's real and look at the facts before making a judgment. This is not Canada or Guyana.

FM
Prince posted:
skeldon_man posted:
Bibi Haniffa posted:

Why is Nancy Pelosi dragging this out in an election year when they should be putting their energy into getting a good Presidential candidate?  The Dems are starting to look desperate that they think Trump will win.  Nancy showed her cards too early.  And if it turns out to be Trump vs. Elizabeth, then Cyat eat Nancy dinner.

Trump will eat Pocahontas alive and spit her out. He will kill her with the claim of Indian ancestry.

That's why they are trying to get rid of him so badly. Why not vote him out at the poll? 

A man commits a crime and we should wait after he is dead to indict him?

FM

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