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Impeachment Cases in History

Impeachment Cases in History. “Impeachment—”To be brought to Trial” The Impeachment Process is the means by which elected officials can be removed from their office. Duties In Impeachment:. How Does The System Work? Each Branch of the Government is involved.

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Impeachment Cases in History

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  1. Impeachment Cases in History • “Impeachment—”To be brought to Trial” • The Impeachment Process is the means by which elected officials can be removed from their office.

  2. Duties In Impeachment: • How Does The System Work? • Each Branch of the Government is involved. • A Two-Thirds Vote is needed in each portion of the process • In the end, a trial is needed to decide two main points: 1) Impeach or not • 2) Remove or not

  3. Branches of Government at Work: • Three Branches Working together: • Executive Branch: President and Cabinet • Legislative Branch: House and Senate • Judicial Branch: Courts • “A system of checks and balances”

  4. Duties of our Government: • Chief Justice: Presides over impeachment hearing and trial. • House of Reps: Acts as the prosecutor—they will decide on impeachment. • Senate: They will act as the Jury in the trial to remove the official.

  5. What are they looking for? • Articles of Impeachment: • Laws against the Constitution that were broken. • The more you have, the better your case. • In each of the three cases we look at we’ll discuss the crimes, or “articles of impeachment” against each.

  6. Presidential Impeachments: • How Many Have We Had? • The Presidents: • Andrew Johnson—1867 • Richard Nixon—1974 • Bill Clinton—1999 • What Has Been The Outcome?

  7. The different Cases: • Andrew Johnson—1867 • First Presidential Case in History • Stemmed from issues surrounding Reconstruction and the Civil War • Would have changed history forever if the outcome of trial different. • We’ll look at this case last.

  8. More Recent Case Studies: • Richard Nixon—1974

  9. Richard Nixon and “Watergate” • Watergate Hotel Break-in was June of 1972 • Election was in November of 1972 • Controversy of Break-in ran wild for over two years. • Ends with Nixon’s resignation

  10. Nixon Background: • VP for Eisenhower in the 1950’s • Ran against JFK in 1960—Had the election won until the end—”TV Debates” • Leaves politics—home to California • Talked into running again in 1968 • Would not have won in 1968 if not for the assassination of RFK

  11. Nixon Notes • War in Vietnam a huge issue in campaign • Nixon wants, “Peace with Honor” • Promises removal of troops from Vietnam • War winding down leading into the election of 1972 • Nixon is the overwhelming favorite

  12. Nixon Notes • Election of 1972—Democrats self destructing. Republicans knew their every move. • Top Democratic candidates all seem to fall apart once they gain any momentum. • In the end, George McGovern from SD ends up being the top candidate for Dem’s. • Then comes the “Watergate Break-in”

  13. Watergate Break-in: • June 1972 • Break in at the Democratic National Committee headquarters. • How they are caught: • Years that follow are trouble for Nixon—starts with Spiro Agnew • Adds Gerald Ford as VP

  14. Who was involved? • Washington Post Reporters in Court following a drug case. • “Woodward and Berstein” • Notice White House Lawyers in same courtroom pleading out case for burglars. • Election of 1972 goes off without notice—Nixon vs. McGovern from SD!

  15. Reporters follow their leads: • “CREEP”—Committee to re-elect the President—Headed up by former Attn. General John Mitchell. • “Deep Throat”—inside source • Evidence Follows up the chain of command all the way to Nixon. • Two years of trials, hearings, firings, Top White House people going to Jail.

  16. End For Nixon • White House Tapes ordered to court • Nixon at first refuses—finally gives them up—18 minutes missing. • “Saturday Night Massacre” Nixon fires top aids and prosecutor Archibald Cox. • Impeachment rumored on Capital Hill. • Multiple Articles of Impeachment argued—as many as 17 different charges pending against Nixon. • Resigns August 1974.

  17. Speech • YouTube - President Richard Nixon - Address Announcing Resignation

  18. Post Watergate: • Gerald Ford as President—Nelson Rockefeller as VP • Ford pardons all Nixon crimes—there is no trial of Nixon. • America struggles in Post Vietnam economy and time. • Ford defeated by Jimmy Carter in 1976—mainly b/c of issues related to Nixon pardon, and post war problems.

  19. Clinton Impeachment • “Whitewater” • Whitewater, not Watergate! • Investigation into improper actions while as Governor of Arkansas. • Hillary and Bill Clinton involved. • Question was—Who all is involved, and to what degree?

  20. Bill Clinton Background:

  21. Whitewater Case • After being elected in 1992, investigation starts in 1994 about improper activity. • “Whitewater” land company. • Improper/Insider holdings while as Governor.

  22. Congress Moves to Investigate: • Appoints: Ken Starr • Deep investigation into all issues while as Governor. • Government paid for investigation. • Keep in mind—JFK shooting, Warren Commission—Zero Government funds • Starr committee spent Millions of dollars to investigate!

  23. What did he find? • No evidence of wrong doing in Whitewater. • Deals were made, no evidence against Bill or Hillary. • Did find questions of sexual misconduct while as Governor. • Starr starts to dig.

  24. Starr uncovers Monica Lewinsky

  25. Starr’s Report: • Has Lewinsky on tape admitting affair. • Clinton denies misconduct in front of Grand Jury. • Starr breaks the case • Government moves toward impeachment

  26. Articles of Impeachment • Two Articles of Impeachment • 1) Lying under oath • 2) Obstruction of Justice.

  27. Clinton Impeached! • Goes to Trial for Removal: Need Two Thirds vote for removal: 67/100 Get 50/100 on one vote Get 41/100 on the other Clinton stays as President

  28. Whitewater Final Story: • Starr commission fades away • Clinton finishes out 2nd term • Record popularity rating—near 75% of all Americans

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