The Constitution allows the Senate to ban an official convicted in an impeachment trial from ever holding federal office again. If this rare procedure is invoked, it could be the end of Trump’s political career.
There’s no Constitutional step-by-step for impeachment, so Congress decides the rules for proceedings. Here’s how Trump’s first impeachment went. businessinsider.com/trump-impeachm…
After the house impeaches, The Senate then holds a trial. At the end of the trial, the Senate votes on whether to convict the official on the impeachment charges brought by the House.
Following this conviction, the Senate could hold a second vote to block an impeached official from holding another federal office, and that requires only a simple majority of the Senate to pass.
❓Is this process politically possible, given the weeks left in Trump’s presidency?
Yes, but it may be tough. Democrats will soon have a narrow majority in the Senate, but they would still need the support of 17 additional Republicans.
Impeaching President Trump at this moment is also very tricky: impeachment proceedings can take months, and it’s unclear if the Constitution allows Congress to impeach Trump once he’s out of office.
So far, impeachment has received some bipartisan support. GOP Sen. Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania said that President Donald Trump has “committed impeachable offenses.” businessinsider.com/pat-toomey-tru…
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Insider looked at data from states with the largest proportions of Black residents. Six states publish their data by race. Across these states, vaccinations for Black people and other minorities lagged behind vaccinations for white people.
This vaccine shortfall is striking because research shows that Black Americans and Black healthcare workers have made up a disproportionate number of coronavirus cases and deaths.
Even on the day when Joe Biden was officially certified by the Electoral College as the US president-elect, most of the Republican apparatus did not publicly change its tune. businessinsider.com/these-gop-reps…
President-elect Joe Biden officially earned over 270 Electoral College votes on Monday, bringing an end to nearly six weeks of efforts by President Trump to subvert and invalidate election results.
However, Trump has not yet conceded the 2020 election. His campaign, Republican allies, and Trump himself have mounted at least 40 legal challenges since Election Day. They've won zero. businessinsider.com/trump-campaign…
✅ An interview with @Airbnb cofounder @nathanblec
✅ Speech writing lessons from men who drafted past presidential inaugural addresses
✅ A deep dive into @Hillsong
This is what Business Insider subscribers had access to this week. A thread. 👇
A bipartisan group of senators have said that the final details of their $908 billion #COVID19 stimulus plan could be finalized early this week. A thread 👇 businessinsider.com/covid-stimulus…
The bill contains $288 billion for a small-business loan program, $180 billion to boost unemployment insurance, and $16 billion to distribute the coronavirus vaccine and help public-health workers track people who are infected. businessinsider.com/stimulus-908-b…
However the stimulus plan doesn't include new $1,200 checks for Americans. Excluding the checks from the package was the only way to reach an agreement with Republicans, according to Democratic Sen. Dick Durbin. businessinsider.com/covid-stimulus…
Giuliani has made a string of public appearances in recent days as the face of Trump's faltering legal efforts to nullify the 2020 election results. The events in 3 states featured few masks and little social distancing.
President Donald Trump's campaign and Republican officials have filed 32 lawsuits since Election Day in an effort to contest the results of the 2020 election.