pumpkinpi wrote:Can you impeach members of congress?
Of course you can. You can impeach any elected official. But as the self-styled anarchist out this way found out, impeaching means nothing
without a trial and conviction. He was certain that because Clinton had been impeached, he should have been automatically been removed from office (if not drawn and quartered after being shot and hung).
An impeachment equals an indictment. By itself, impeachment is just an accusation found worthy of being taken to trial. By itself, it carries NO penalty.
You can be impeached and found not guilty at trial, and you're free as a bird (
Impeached federal officials in US history).
Since 1797 the House of Representatives has impeached sixteen federal officials. These include two presidents, a cabinet member, a senator, a justice of the Supreme Court, and eleven federal judges. Of those, the Senate has convicted and removed seven, all of them judges. Not included in this list are the office holders who have resigned rather than face impeachment, most notably, President Richard M. Nixon.
Two U.S. presidents have been impeached: Andrew Johnson, the seventeenth chief executive, and William J. Clinton, the forty-second.
Now, reputations may or may not suffer because of impeachment, but that's a moral judgment, not a legal one.
Too many people think that impeachment by itself solves all the problems. Not so -- it's just the start of the process.