Impeaching US president: How the process works

 | Updated: Sep 25, 2019, 12:59 PM IST

The US House of Representatives on Tuesday launched an official impeachment investigation of President Donald Trump after he encouraged a foreign leader to conduct a probe that could damage a political rival.

(Text from Reuters)

US Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, a Democrat, announced the investigation at a news conference, declaring "no one is above the law."

There has been a groundswell of support among Democratic Party lawmakers for the move following Trump's public admission that he asked Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskiy to investigate the son of presidential candidate and former Vice President Joe Biden.

(Photograph:AFP)

Donald Trump

Trump wrote on Twitter on Tuesday that the July 25 phone call was "very friendly and totally appropriate" and that he put "no pressure" on Zelenskiy.

He later called the House probe "Witch Hunt Garbage" in a tweet.

(Photograph:AFP)

Donald Trump

The founders of the United States created the office of the presidency and feared its powers could be abused.

So they included in the US Constitution a procedure for removing a sitting president from office.

Under the Constitution, the president can be removed from office for "treason, bribery, or other high crimes and misdemeanours."

What exactly that means is unclear. Historically, it can encompass corruption and other abuses of the public's trust.

A president does not need to have violated a specific criminal law to have committed an impeachable offence.

Many legal commentators have said that pressuring a foreign leader to interfere in a US election is the sort of conduct the nation's founders would have considered an impeachable offence.

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Donald Trump

A misconception about "impeachment" is that it refers to the removal of a president from office. In fact, impeachment refers only to the House, the lower chamber of Congress, bringing charges - similar to an indictment in a criminal case.

If a simple majority of the House's 435 members approves bringing charges, known as "articles of impeachment," the process moves to the Senate, the upper chamber, which holds a trial to determine the president's guilt.

In such a trial, House members act as the prosecutors, the senators as jurors; the chief justice of the US Supreme Court presides. A two-thirds majority vote is required in the 100-member Senate to convict and remove a president.

Lawmakers are not required to prove their case beyond a reasonable doubt the evidentiary standard in a criminal case.

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Donald Trump

The House has 235 Democrats, 199 Republicans, and one independent. As a result, the Democrats could impeach Trump with no Republican support.

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Donald Trump

Donald Trump

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US Vice-President Mike Pence

In the unlikely event the Senate convicted Trump, Vice President Mike Pence would become president for the remainder of Trump's term, which ends on January 20, 2021.

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Donald Trump

Under the Constitution's 25th Amendment, a president can be replaced by their vice president if the chief executive becomes unable to do the job, such as due to a disabling medical or mental condition.

That process begins with the vice president and a majority of the members of the Cabinet notifying Congress that the president is not capable of performing the job.

(Text from Reuters)

(Photograph:AFP)