Nealithi wrote: ↑Fri Sep 07, 2018 8:46 pmSee that is part of the problem...
We are certainly suffering from an overabundance of passion and a dearth of knowledge. On both sides.
The thing to remember is that a President is not removed from office because he commits
crimes. He might commit crimes - he might not. But it doesn't matter, because criminal acts are not what gets a president removed. A President gets removed when he loses
political support. Committing crimes can certainly help with that - being tied to Watergate was what finally sunk Nixon. But it's no guarantee. Clinton most definitely committed perjury, but he never lost his support, so impeachment didn't stick.
And once a President loses political support, not committing crimes will not protect him. The Constitution says that the House can impeach a President for 'high crimes and misdemeanors" but never defines what that means, so it means whatever the House says it does. A President
can be impeached for anything, but he almost never is, because a sitting President almost never loses enough support to warrant it.
Is Trump in danger of impeachment? We won't know until November. Obviously the Democrats want him out. But it's simply not possible for them to take enough Senate seats to oust him, no matter how big the blue wave is. At least 15 Republican senators will have to cross party lines to convict him.
That's hard to imagine right now, but if the blue wave is big enough, it IS possible. Trump is not particularly popular with many Republicans. They stay loyal because there is a perception that no Republican can cross Trump without ending his career, so they don't. But if they become convinced that their careers are over either way, the individual calculus for a fair number of Senators may change.
It'll have to be a hell of a wave, though.