I read the the Judiciary Committee Report on Constitutional Grounds for Presidential Impeachment.
Who wants to get wonky 🤓 and go through it? 🙋♀️
judiciary.house.gov/sites/democrat…
Take out your notebooks. It's time for Impeachment Law 101.
Because impeachment results only in loss of the right to hold office, the purpose isn't to inflict personal punishment. (That’s for criminal court)
At common law (the law the framers would have been familiar with) “extortion” meant taking something you’re not entitled to.
Bribery was lesser because the solicitation alone was an offense.
See: ]
The report:
💠Explains that in fact, all the processes have been fair, and that Trump was given greater privileges than Nixon or Clinton.
💠Explains that there is plenty of direct and circumstantial evidence, and moreover, Trump can’t complain that not enough witnesses have first hand information when he ordered them not to testify.
💠Denies that Trump can do whatever he wants as president.
💠Says Congress doesn't have to accept Trump's excuses at face value.
Courts assess motive all the time using such factors as:
Does the explanation make sense? Does it fit with other behavior? Are the explanations shifting? Are the explanations based on falsehoods?
💠Finally, explains that impeachment doesn’t “nullify” an election—it is part of the democratic process and necessary to stop a president abusing his power.
It's also relatively short (52 pages).
Go for it!
View as a blog post: terikanefield-blog.com/over-the-cliff…