How does impeachment work? - Alex Gendler - YouTube

Channel: TED-Ed

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For most jobs, it's understood that you can be fired,
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whether for crime,
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incompetence,
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or just poor performance.
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But what if your job happens to be the most powerful position in the country,
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or the world?
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That's where impeachment comes in.
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Impeachment isn't the same as actually removing someone from office.
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Like an indictment in criminal court,
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it's only the formal accusation that launches a trial,
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which could end in conviction or acquittal.
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Originating in the United Kingdom,
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impeachment allowed Parliament to vote for removing a government official from office
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even without the king's consent.
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Although this was an important check on royal power,
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the king couldn't be impeached
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because the monarch was considered the source of all government power.
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But for the founders of the American Republic,
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there was no higher authority beyond the people themselves.
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And so impeachment was adopted in the United States as a power of Congress
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applying to any civil officers, up to and including the president.
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Although demands for impeachment can come from any members of the public,
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only the House of Representatives has the power to actually initiate the process.
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It begins by referring the matter to a committee,
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usually the House Committee on Rules
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and the House Committee on the Judiciary.
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These committees review the accusations,
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examine the evidence,
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and issue a recommendation.
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If they find sufficient grounds to proceed,
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the House holds a separate vote on each of the specific charges,
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known as Articles of Impeachment.
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If one or more passes by a simple majority,
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the official is impeached and the stage is set for trial.
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The actual trial that follows impeachment is held in the Senate.
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Selected members of the House, known as managers, act as the prosecution,
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while the impeached official and their lawyers present their defense.
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The Senate acts as both judge and jury,
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conducting the trial and deliberating after hearing all the arguments.
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If it's the president or vice president being impeached,
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the chief justice of the Supreme Court presides.
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A conviction requires a supermajority of two-thirds
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and results in automatic removal from power.
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Depending on the original charges,
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it can also disqualify them from holding office in the future
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and open them to standard criminal prosecution.
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So what exactly can get someone impeached?
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That's a bit more complicated.
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Unlike in the United Kingdom,
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impeachment in the U.S. pits an elected legislature
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against other democratically elected members of government.
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Therefore, to prevent the process from being used as a political weapon,
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the Constitution specifies that an official can only be impeached
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for treason,
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bribery,
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or other high crimes and misdemeanors.
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That still leaves a lot of room for interpretation,
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not to mention politics,
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and many impeachment trials have split along partisan lines.
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But the process is generally understood to be reserved for serious abuses of power.
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The first official to be impeached was Tennesse Senator William Blount in 1797
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for conspiring with Britain to cease the Spanish colony of Louisiana.
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Since then, the House has launched impeachment investigations about 60 times,
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but only 19 have led to actual impeachment proceedings.
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The eight cases that ended in a conviction and removal from office
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were all federal judges.
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And impeachment of a sitting president is even more rare.
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Andrew Johnson was impeached in 1868
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for attempting to replace Secretary of War Edwin Stanton
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without consulting the Senate.
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Over a century later, Bill Clinton was impeached
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for making false statements under oath during a sexual harassment trial.
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Both were ultimately acquitted when the Senate's votes to convict
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fell short of the required two-thirds majority.
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And contrary to popular belief,
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Richard Nixon was never actually impeached for the Watergate scandal.
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He resigned before it could happen
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knowing he would almost certainly be convicted.
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Theoretically, the U.S. government is already designed
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to prevent abuses of power,
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limiting different branches through a system of checks and balances,
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term limits,
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and free elections.
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But impeachment can be seen as an emergency brake
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for when these safeguards fail.