moonflasher
Literotica Guru
- Joined
- Jun 15, 2012
- Posts
- 1,533
Democrats once again fail....Damn they're good at it.

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Odd that only senators that crossed the party line were two Republicans.
The Democrats really know how to obey orders!
I wonder if the two will get their heads on pikes? I'd guess not, because that was a lie from the outset.
House Democrats’ strategic errors have damaged the constitutional tool of impeachment.
For people who care about the rule of law, the integrity of the Constitution, and the longevity of America’s democratic republic—one in which the will of the people, not the whims of the ruler controls—the full realization that the Senate is poised to acquit Donald J. Trump after a sham trial is devastating. Congressional Democrats and Republicans—not to mention the Chief Justice of the United States John Roberts, as well as former presidents Barack Obama and George W. Bush, all of whom have stood silent during the dismantling of our federal system of separated powers—share the responsibility here. Whatever comes next—an acquitted Trump who feels free to act with greater impunity? a Trump defeated at the polls in November?—generations of historians will excavate what went wrong with the impeachment process this time around.
To be sure, Trump’s lawyers are primarily to blame for torturing legal precedent and established facts to suit their client’s temperament and his demands for unlimited power. But it is worth noting for the record that House Democrats made several strategic errors, the unintentional result of which could be lasting damage to Congress’s ability to hold future presidents accountable for violating laws, standards, and norms.
So when the only Republican in the House who voted to impeach had left the party, that meant...what, exactly? Don't expect anyone here to believe you think that reflects well on the Republicans in light of what you said above.
Not everyone is scared of Pelosi like Trump is.Are you talking about van Drew? He was a Democrat. He only switched teams to the Republicans when he saw the travesty Pelosi was perpetrating and didn't want to be part of.
Not everyone is scared of Pelosi like Trump is.
From here on out there is no power of oversight for the legislative branches.
Subpoenas can be ignored and end up being a legislative power
We are fucked!
We now have a unitary executive.
God help us
From here on out there is no power of oversight for the legislative branches.
Subpoenas can be ignored and end up being a legislative power
We are fucked!
We now have a unitary executive.
God help us
Ireadforpleasure writes: "Senate Republicans Are Betting That Voters’ Anger Will Fade by November"
Voter anger against the Democrats for wasting millions of taxpayer dollars on their failed impeachment clown-show will last FAR BEYOND NOVEMBER! Trump's political base knows exactly what the Dems unsuccessfully tried to do, overturning the 2016 presidential election, and then trying to keep Trump from running for re-election in 2020!
Don’t Be Confused by Trump’s Defense. What He Is Accused of Are Crimes.
The phrase “abuse of power” appears nowhere in the federal criminal code, which lists thousands of criminal laws passed by Congress over the years. But many crimes aren’t written down in codes. Crimes derived from the “common law” — the body of law developed from judicial opinions and legal treatises rather than statutes — have been a staple of American law for centuries. Today in many states, district attorneys routinely charge people with things like “assault,” “forgery” and “indecent exposure” even where no statute makes those things a crime.
In the Clinton articles of impeachment 'abuse of power' was voted down because of its broad and unprovable disposition and therefore congress voted on perjury and obstruction of justice, legitimate statutory violations. not to be confused with obstruction of congress which separation of powers under article II adds up to nothing more than verbiage.
Nixon resigned when articles of impeachment included felony violations.
Common-law crimes are no harder to define with precision than crimes written down in a statute. Ask any first-year law students for the common law’s definition of burglary and they’ll (hopefully) be able to tell you: “the breaking and entering of the dwelling house of another in the nighttime with the intent to commit a felony.” If someone is accused of burglary in a state where the crime isn’t defined by statute, no defense lawyer would respond by announcing that burglary is vague or made up. Burglary is an established crime, even where its definition exists only in legal treatises and judicial opinions.
Since 'abuse of power' is ambiguous at best. Not to have some statutory relevancy attached to an article of impeachment is a fool's errand. The real travesty of this impeachment is that it's strictly along partisan lines. This attempt at impeaching Trump started in 2016 with the Mueller report. Hard to make a case that the dems were really concerned about a phone call. It failed along party lines because its obviously based on emotion and not evidentiary conclusions. Most legal experts concur that if an indictment as frivolous as what the dems brought to the senate, was brought before the courts, it would never have past muster. The senate is not a court of law but it mirrors the process in many ways. This impeachment was exactly what Hamilton feared, weaponizing it to settling political scores. When the dems insist every action by Trump is a wrongdoing then the jury becomes tone deaf, and when no statutory violation is presented you eliminate the standard that gives legitimacy to the burden of proof, it makes acquitting very easy. It fails prima facie.
President Trump’s defense falls apart for precisely the same reason. As with burglary, American legal treatises and judicial opinions have long recognized the criminal offense of “abuse of power,” sometimes called “misconduct in office.” In 1846, the first edition of the pre-eminent treatise on American criminal law defined this common-law offense as when “a public officer, entrusted with definite powers to be exercised for the benefit of the community, wickedly abuses or fraudulently exceeds them.” The treatise noted that such an officer “is punishable by indictment, though no injurious effects result to any individual from his misconduct.”
Misconduct that doesn't reach the level of high crimes and misdemeanors and removal. Dems created this polarized environment with it's cry wolf for 3 years.
Courts from Michigan to Maryland have recently upheld convictions of government officials for committing this common-law crime — despite objections that the crime has never been codified by statute. And the House, in its first article of impeachment, has accused Mr. Trump of exactly what the law prohibits: He “abused the powers of the presidency” for “corrupt purposes in pursuit of a personal political benefit.”
Prima facie, the house assertions don't hold water. The house botched the process. They failed to make a case.. There are 53 senators that disagree in one way or another. In a court of law the dems case of trying to established the burden of proof for "personal political benefit" would be thrown out. How do you prove that?
The Adam Schiff show was unconstitutional right from the start. The impeachment process and relative authority was not granted to Schiff or Nadler. Impeachment by committee is unconstitutional, so were the subpoenas. It's the peoples house not Nancy's house. Nancy's authority is delegated to her or house committees by a vote of the whole body and no such vote took place. Nancy is an administrator of sorts not a dictator. Nancy is an inclusive part of the body with one vote. She carries no more authority than any other member. Committees don't conduct impeachment, they conduct investigations, the house sanction's impeachment by a vote. The lack of relevant authority is the reason they're pushing for additional witnesses, they messed up from the start and got caught.
As for “obstruction of Congress,” that’s not only a common-law crime. Versions of the crime have also been listed in the federal criminal code since the 19th century.
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/01/27/opinion/impeachment-defense-trump.html
Why do Republicans think Trump is the best candidate for 2020, after the shitshow of the last three years?
They've known since the 2016 campaign that he is a sick fuck who will exact revenge on anyone who obstructs his ascension to supreme ruler
He can also rally the deplorable to the polls without anyone else having to sink to their level to do it - Trump is only too willing to do that himself.
As for the taxpayer dollars spent on the impeachment, everybody knows the deficit only matters when a Democrat is president. That won't change anyone's mind on either side of the aisle.