Thursday, October 31, 2019

U.S. House Debate & Vote On Impeachment Inquiry Resolution


WNU Editor: This vote is split along the party lines. And is there public support for this? .... New poll poses serious questions about Democrats' impeachment drive (Byron York, Washington Examiner). More here .... AP-NORC Poll: Trump approval steady as impeachment rages (AP).

8 comments:

Anonymous said...

Fuck the democrats/communists. Time for martial law and lack their asses up forever in Gitmo.

Anonymous said...

sure, macho man...hide behind Anon (yes. me too) and talk heap big talk.

Anonymous said...

There is a constitutional process. The Senate can refuse to remove the president from office. The electorate will then decide at the next election...no need for calling for armed insurrection.

Mike Feldhake said...

Ok, might be constitutional but Due Process matters! If the dumbass Dems don't want to play fair, then yes maybe some armed resistance is due. Although, I think they will lose big in 2020 as they just keep sinking to new lows.

The big issue here is what they have chose to focus on instead of their sworn duty. F Them and no Anon here.

Anonymous said...

simmer down Mike
what they have done is their sworn duty. they now claim Trump has not done his sworn duty...time for then for both sides to show their hands, what they are holding. Ultimately it will be the electorate that will decide, not me, not you, not the Dems and not the Repubs.

Bob Huntley said...

Well the fix is in relative to the trial being held in the Senate and with Roberts the presiding judge. Although he has pulled a few surprises in his time.

Anonymous said...

Nixon: when "the goods" revealed, gop split from him and he resigned.
Assume, though, senate supports him and he remains in office...then the voters will ultimately decide for or against both him and the GOP

Anonymous said...

the due process is given in what just got passed. in fact, more so than Nixon or Clinton had!

Passage of the House resolution weakens a central argument for both the White House and allied Republicans: that the inquiry is illegitimate because the House hasn’t held a vote to approve it. The resolution’s adoption may also force Republican members to defend the substance of Trump’s conduct in Ukraine, which most of them have been loath to do.