Abstract
Before news about the Covid-19 pandemic engulfed the world from February 2020, and the blanket media coverage of it in the USA in particular, one of the biggest news stories in the USA in recent times was the impeachment of president Trump. This event has prompted many to ask what it means and how it works. Impeachment is grave and momentous. This serious constitutional power is inherently a legal as well as a political process and has only been wielded by Congress on a few rare moments in US history. It is potentially a profoundly disruptive event and prudently consists of a two-step process that starts with the House of Representatives approving articles of impeachment (the formal accusations) against the president and their consequent referral to the Senate to conduct the trial and pronounce a ruling on the accusations. Each of the Chambers of Congress is entrusted with a specific but distinct responsibility in respect of impeachment that is prescribed in Article I of the Constitution. The House “shall have the sole Power of Impeachment” and the Senate “shall have the sole Power to try all Impeachments”. “Impeachment” as the term is often used is thus not synonymous with both impeachment and removal from office. The House must first formulate and approve the indictment against the president; its power is not dependent on the Senate’s. The latter’s is “to try” the president on the approved charges. With the Chief Justice presiding the Senate must vote by a required two-thirds majority for indictment. Only then it has to decide how to deal with this violation of oath of office, which is not a criminal conviction in the traditional sense of law breaking. While resembling a court, it is, however, vital to understand that the Senate conducts a political trial, not a judicial trial. Once both these prescribed steps have been successfully completed can the Senate declare the president unfit to serve and remove him from office. It is the Senate that has the final say in any impeachment. The House plays no role in how the Senate must dispose of an impeached president. There were several challenging points with the case for impeaching president Trump. After three years, during which Democrats publicly and very vociferously accused him of a host of criminal acts – from bribery and extortion to campaign finance violations, obstruction of justice, collusion with Russia, conspiracy and even treason – the two articles of impeachment eventually adopted allege none of those things. Instead two non-criminal allegations – abuse of power and obstruction of Congress – were formulated as charges. Both those seemed farcical to Republicans. Politically, the substance of the articles was a major retreat by Democrats. They thereby effectively admitted that the president did not commit any statutory crimes. It also meant that it would be the first presidential impeachment in history in which no statutory crimes were even alleged. In this alone, president Trump claimed vindication even before the Senate commenced with his trial. Unfortunately, Democrats refused to involve the courts and wait for judicial review. House speaker Pelosi said that they could not be at the mercy of the courts! These kinds of statements seem to belie ulterior political motives ahead of a presidential election less than a year away. She exposed her political playbook when in early 2019 she had first announced that she saw no need for impeachment to proceed only to reverse her stand a few months later in September 2019 when she called on the House to proceed immediately with hearings to formulate articles of impeachment in order to have the entire process completed by the end of 2019. Urgency became the justification for expediting this traditionally weighty and lengthy process. However, once the articles had been passed by the House she held onto them for several weeks into...