Trumpimpeachment
Former President Donald Trump‘s acquittal on Saturday in his second impeachment trial doesn’t mean he’s legally out of the woods – he still could be indicted on criminal charges in numerous cases. Currently, he is the target of at least one criminal investigation, led by Manhattan prosecutor Cyrus Vance, who has been fighting for months to obtain eight years of Trump’s tax returns. Before the 2016 presidential election, two women claimed they had affairs with Trump, the accusations followed by Trump paying them hush money. Additionally, Vance is examining possible allegations of tax evasion an...
uPolitics.com
Conservative lawyer Charles J. Cooper said in an op-ed to the Wall Street Journal that the Republican Senate argument that former President Donald Trump cannot be tried because he is no longer in office is “illogical.” Cooper’s piece was published Sunday, just two days before the Trump Senate trial was set to begin. Forty-five Senate Republicans voted in January in favor of throwing out former President Trump’s charges of “inciting insurrection” because he is no longer in office. The Republican theory is that since the Constitution’s penalty for impeachment is removal from office, impeachment ...
uPolitics.com
A majority of Americans think former President Donald Trump should be convicted during his upcoming impeachment trial and barred from being able to hold a federal position in the future, according to a new ABC News/Ipsos poll conducted on Friday and Saturday. The poll was conducted in both Spanish and English and has been weighted to “adjust for gender by age, race/ethnicity, education, Census region, metropolitan status, household income, and party identification,” the market research company said. With a nationally representative probability sample of 508 respondents, the poll found 56 perce...
uPolitics.com
Facing charges of “incitement of insurrection,” President Donald Trump has been impeached in the House of Representatives for a second time. The vote ended 232 in favor to 197 against. Ten Republicans crossed party lines to vote in favor. It was the first time in U.S. history a president has been impeached twice. Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (D-California) said during her time on the floor that, “He must go. He is a clear and present danger to the nation that we all love.” Because of enhanced pandemic and security protocol, there were very few members of the press on the House floor. Doz...
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