The Donald Trump Impeachment Clock Is Ticking

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The Force is With Me
Congressman Mark Pocan says it has “moved us an hour closer to midnight.”

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Trump Impeachment Clock Ticks as Poll Shows Just 29% Approve of Comey Firing
Trump's firing of his FBI director last week has only increased concerns of his ability to govern

With a new poll of U.S. voters on Sunday showing that less than one-third support his abrupt ouster of FBI Director James Comey last week, the talk of impeaching President Donald Trump and demands for a special prosecutor to investigate possible ties between his campaign and alleged Russian interference in last year's election have reached their highest levels to date.

The new NBC-Wall Street Journal poll released Sunday shows that only 29% of all respondents approved of Comey's firing while over 50% percent of those who said they knew "a lot" about how those events unfolded said they disapprove of the president's behavior.

"Arguably he's already obstructed justice and already violated the emoluments clause. I'm not saying we should impeach him now, I'm calling for an impeachment investigation."
—History professor Allan Lichtman

With Comey's controversial dismissal coinciding with a new round of opinion polls that show Trump's approval ratings stuck at historically low levels, a survey from Quinnipiac last week showed that the top three words that popped into respondents' heads when asked to describe President Trump were: 'idiot'; 'incomepetent'; and 'liar'—in that order.

In the wake of Comey's firing and Trump's subsequent explanation last week, Rep. Mark Pocan (D-Wis.) said Trump's firing of Comey reminded him of the so-called "Doomsday Clock," a project run by the Bulletin of Atomic Scientists which seeks to warn the world about the encroaching threat of nuclear and other forms of human annihilation. "Maybe we should start an impeachment [clock]," Pocan tweeted. "This moved us an hour closer to midnight."

In a widely-circulated op-ed written by Laurence Tribe on Saturday, the Harvard constitutional law professor explained why the prospect of impeachment proceedings should now be front and center. According to Tribe, though Trump's firing of Comey is itself troubling, the case against Trump goes well beyond that.

"Even without getting to the bottom of what Trump dismissed as 'this Russia thing,'" writes Tribe, "impeachable offenses could theoretically have been charged from the outset of this presidency. One important example is Trump’s brazen defiance of the foreign emoluments clause, which is designed to prevent foreign powers from pressuring U.S. officials to stray from undivided loyalty to the United States. Political reality made impeachment and removal on that and other grounds seem premature." But, he adds, "No longer. To wait for the results of the multiple investigations underway is to risk tying our nation’s fate to the whims of an authoritarian leader."

On Friday, Allan Lichtman, a professor of history at American University who correctly predicted Trump's presidential victory, similarly told Newsweek magazine that there is no longer reason to hold off talk of impeachment.
https://www.commondreams.org/news/2...ticks-poll-shows-just-29-approve-comey-firing
 
The Door Opens To Impeachment As Prominent Republicans Are Scared And Want Trump Out

Prominent Republicans who used not to be frightened are now scared of Trump after the past week, which means that the door is now opening for a serious bipartisan movement to oust this president and his administration.

During an appearance on CBS’s Face The Nation, The Washington Post’s David Ignatius relayed the growing fear of Trump among Republicans, “Talking this week to several prominent Republicans, people who have not been sharp critics of Donald Trump, I heard the same thing, which is: This guy scares me. And I think the reason that people were scared this week is that they saw impulsive behavior, they saw a kind of vengeful, brooding about past slights. They saw a willingness to be — to be — just basically to lie to the country, not to tell the truth. And I think — one person said to me, there are no guardrails on this presidency. Another person said, this is Richard Nixon on steroids. In other words, this is kind of a hyperactive — so, I think that’s where we are at the end of the week. A lot of people are scared. And they wonder, how do we get out of this?”

The whispers that Republicans are looking for a way out have been getting louder off the record ever since the President accused Barack Obama of wiretapping him.

Republicans really appear to have believed that they could manage Trump. What they are finding out is that they greatly underestimated Trump’s capacity for misuse of executive power, the Russia scandal, and Trump’s own mental and emotional instability.

A bad 2018 midterm election result combined with growing Trump scandals could be the forces needed to create a bipartisan movement that would lead to the president’s removal. It is important to note that political scandals usually take years to unfold. It understandable that people want Trump gone now, but the reality is that the nation is likely looking at two more years for the Russia scandal unfold.
http://www.politicususa.com/2017/05...hment-prominent-republicans-scared-trump.html

Personally, I don't want him impeached .. YET. I want to see a devastating midterm that turns over the House and Senate back to the democrats .. thus stripping Trump of his power. Then let him spend the rest of his fading days in office being humiliated and crushed.

.. impeach his sorry ass after that.
 
Would be sweet to see Trump impeached then have Pence take over. Liberals will really be sh*tti g a brick then
 
If they don't impeach Trump it won't be from a lack of effort or imagination lol.

And I thought Bush derangement was bad.
 
Just when you think they've reached fever meltdown pitch, they kick it up to another level. She's gonna blow, captain. They canna hold her eny longair.
 
Would be sweet to see Trump impeached then have Pence take over. Liberals will really be sh*tti g a brick then

You seem to think that democrats are afraid of Pence. :0)

Personally, I don't want to see Trump impeached .. YET.

Leave him in office while he continues to seriously damage the Republican Party .. then I want to see a devastating midterm that turns the House and Senate back to the democrats .. stripping Trump of his power, leaving him humiliated and crushed.

... then impeach the clown. :0)
 
If they don't impeach Trump it won't be from a lack of effort or imagination lol.

And I thought Bush derangement was bad.

... but you enjoyed the Obama derangement, yes?

Republicans have no standing, no argument, moral or otherwise to complain about what Trump is getting.

NONE
 
You seem to think that democrats are afraid of Pence. :0)

Personally, I don't want to see Trump impeached .. YET.

Leave him in office while he continues to seriously damage the Republican Party .. then I want to see a devastating midterm that turns the House and Senate back to the democrats .. stripping Trump of his power, leaving him humiliated and crushed.

... then impeach the clown. :0)

I don't care if people are afraid of him or not. I'd like to see a conservative in the office passing some conservative legislation to unleash the shackles on our economy
 
... but you enjoyed the Obama derangement, yes?

Republicans have no standing, no argument, moral or otherwise to complain about what Trump is getting.

NONE

He's getting tons done while you weep. Cutting funding by 8.8 billion dollars to abortion providers worldwide, for example.
 
I don't care if people are afraid of him or not. I'd like to see a conservative in the office passing some conservative legislation to unleash the shackles on our economy

Without question, the Congress after the midterms will look quite different .. and some of what's in Mike Pence's head is every bit as loony as what's in Trump's head.

He would have to convince a lot of democrats to go along with his conservative economic approach at a time when the democratic base has no taste for it or compromise with the far-right.
 
Without question, the Congress after the midterms will look quite different .. and some of what's in Mike Pence's head is every bit as loony as what's in Trump's head.

He would have to convince a lot of democrats to go along with his conservative economic approach at a time when the democratic base has no taste for it or compromise with the far-right.

It's amazing how a poorly performing econony can make people stop being ideological partisans and work to get the economic engine going
 
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