How to impeach a president - YouTube

Channel: Vox

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When America’s founding fathers were debating how to set up a brand-new government, they
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ran into a problem: What should happen if a president, in Benjamin
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Franklin’s words, has “rendered himself obnoxious?”
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Most countries didn’t have elected leaders.
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Or ways to get rid of them, if necessary.
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So Franklin and the framers turned to a provision of British common law known as impeachment:
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Trial, conviction, punishment.
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In Great Britain, impeachment could be brought against anybody, any citizen.
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And it also could result in any punishment, including death.
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Michael Gerhardt is a constitutional law professor who literally wrote the book in impeachment.
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So they put impeachment in the constitution and then set up a whole series of unique american
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features in it.
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The constitution lays out three offenses for which any federal official, including the
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President, can be impeached.
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The first two, treason and bribery, are pretty straightforward.
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Treason means helping enemies of the United States.
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Bribery, taking money or gifts in exchange for a political favor.
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And the last phrase, other high crimes and misdemeanors, is not defined in the constitution
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But these were thought to be serious offenses against the Republic, and serious breaches
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of trust.
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For three U.S. presidents, Andrew Johnson, Richard Nixon, and Bill Clinton, the question
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of whether to impeach and remove them from office centered around whether their behavior
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fit in this third category of high crimes and misdemeanors.
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The process of Impeachment has to start in the House of Representatives.
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Any member can introduce an impeachment resolution.
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A resolution, that President George W. Bush be impeached for high crimes and misdemeanors
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But plenty, like this one, go nowhere.
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That’s because impeachment charges, have to be approved by a majority of the House
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Judiciary Committee.
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Next, the full House of Representatives votes on whether to impeach.
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If a simple majority votes yes, the President is officially impeached.
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But that doesn’t mean they lose the presidency.
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That decision happens in a Senate trial.
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The Senators act as the jury.
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They hear evidence from both sides And if 67% of those Senators vote to to convict,
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the President is removed from office.
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This has never actually happened.
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In 1863, a House majority voted to impeach Andrew Johnson for firing is Secretary of
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War.
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This was after months of conflict after Reconstruction following the civil war.
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The only other president impeached by the House was Bill Clinton in 1998.
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But in both cases, not enough Senators voted to actually remove them from office.
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Johnson was only one vote short, but in Clinton’s case, it wasn’t even close
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The Respondent, William Jefferson Clinton, is not guilty as charged in the Senate article
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of impeachment.
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That’s because votes in Clinton’s impeachment in the House and trial in the Senate were
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split almost completely by party.
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part of the disagreement within the Senate had to do with the context in which Clinton's
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actions had taken place.
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The whole thing started when Clinton was sued for sexual harassment by a woman named Paula
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Jones, who worked for him when he was Governor of Arkansas.
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In a deposition for that case, Jones’ lawyers asked Clinton if he’d had a sexual relationship
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with a different employee-- a White House intern named Monica Lewinsky.
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Clinton said he hadn’t.
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I did not have sexual relations with that woman.
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Ms. Lewinsky.
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But that wasn’t true.
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I had intimate contact with her that was inappropriate.
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The house will be in order.
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Republicans in the house argued Clinton should be impeached for lying under oath.
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What the defenders want to do is lower the standards by which we judge this president,
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and lower the standards for our society by doing so.
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Democrats disagreed that the offense was serious enough to be called a “high crime.”
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At one point, they walked out of the chamber in protest.
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There is one small segment on the far-right, who have lost all objectivity, and are determined
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to impeach the President at all costs.
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House Resolution 6, 11, resolved, that William Jefferson Clinton, President of the United
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States, is impeached, for high crimes and misdemeanors.
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But Clinton’s popularity didn’t really suffer.
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There was not a sense the American people are demanding that he be tossed out of office.
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Not a single Democratic Senator voted to remove Clinton from office.
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Typically, you need to have members of more than one party
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That’s one of the major differences between Clinton’s case and President Richard Nixon’s.
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Over the course of several months in 1973, members of Congress, and the American people,
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learned about Nixon’s possible involvement in a break-in at the offices of the Democratic
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National Committee.
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By the time the charges had been shown to have some evidence supporting them, the public
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began to kind of render a judgement against Nixon, which was, his popularity plummeted.
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That evidence came out because Republicans, members of Nixon’s own party, in both the
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House and Senate, called for investigations into the President’s behavior.
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In the House Judiciary Committee, Republicans joined with Democrats to approve Articles
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of Impeachment against Nixon.
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But Nixon resigned before the full house could vote on impeachment because Republican leaders
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had told him there was no way he’d survive.
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Which explains why no president has ever been removed from office by impeachment.
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For that to happen, the president doesn’t just have to commit some high crime or misdemeanor.
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He has to lose his own party.
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In which case, history suggests he’ll see himself out.