View example sentences and word forms for Impeachments.
Impeachments meaning
plural of impeachment
Example sentences (20)
Again, let me stress that this is after two impeachments, four indictments and facing 700-plus years in prison.
Despite his troubles — two impeachments and two indictments — Trump is by far the leading Republican candidate to win the GOP presidential nomination.
Donald Trump's impeachments occurred, and no "expungement" process will change that, so House Democrats would be unlikely to focus on repealing such measures if they were to gain the majority in 2024, according to a lawmaker.
Republicans remain so opposed to Trump’s impeachments, in fact, that they are pressing for votes to expunge the charges altogether — an attempt to clear his name that is without direct precedent in congressional history.
Thanks for pointing out that the Republicans’ Benghazi 2: Impeachment Boogaloo is solely based on “payback” for Trump’s two totally justifiable impeachments.
Trump's first of two impeachments, in 2019, was for pressuring Ukraine to investigate Biden, his Democratic rival.
More recently … the United States has spent tax dollars to finance and help organize opposition groups and media in Honduras, Paraguay, and Brazil, leading to congressional impeachments of democratically elected presidents.
Trump not only survived the worst campaign scandal in modern history but also went on to escape consequences for a range of misbehavior in the Oval Office, including a damning special counsel investigation, two impeachments, and an attempted insurrection.
Federalist Papers No. 65, Alexander Hamilton, talking about the reasoning behind giving the Senate the power to try impeachments, wrote: “Where else than in the Senate could have been found a tribunal sufficiently dignified, or sufficiently independent?
James Madison thought the Supreme Court, not the Senate, should try presidential impeachments.
Lofgren is a veteran of three impeachments: She was a Judiciary Committee staffer during Watergate, and served on the panel during Clinton's impeachment.
Senators are called to "try impeachments" in the Constitution, voting on whether to impeach and remove based on the initial charges and any additional evidence presented.
The Constitution withstood a civil war, a global war, a Great Depression, presidential impeachments, and two centuries of poisonous political partisanship.
Their acquaintanceship included experience with impeachments in actual practice, not simply as history.
And while Republicans accurately note that a vote to begin impeachment proceedings was taken before the Judiciary Committee moved against Nixon and Clinton, legal experts that has not been the case with other impeachments.
She and Adam Schiff, chair of the House intelligence committee, have tried to present their effort as non-partisan, but all impeachments are political.
The common factor of the two impeachments is that it was clear from the start that the U.S. Senate would never convict, which requires a two-thirds majority.
There, Katyal points to the impeachment and removal of Walter Nixon from the federal bench in 1989, and the supreme court holding that the “judiciary, and the supreme court in particular, were not chosen to have any role in impeachments”.
There were no impeachments.
The Times to the impeachments of Presidents Richard Nixon and Bill Clinton, both of which he took part in as a senator, and found that he had consistently urged restraint and expressed discomfort with removing a president from office.