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  • Impeachment by its nature, it’s a political process.”

  • What people think is going to happen

  • can turn out to be very different from what happens.”

  • Because it has to do with elected officials

  • holding another elected official to account

  • for their conduct.”

  • When the framers of the Constitution

  • created a process to remove a president from office,

  • they were wellkind of vague.

  • So to understand how it’s going to play out,

  • the past is really our best guide.

  • “I think were just all in for a really crazy ride.”

  • Collectively, these New York Times reporters

  • have covered U.S. politics for over 150 years.

  • “I’m also a drummer in a band, so …”

  • Theyve reported on past impeachment inquiries.

  • Yea, I’m lost in Senate wonderland.”

  • And they say that the three weve had

  • so far have been full of twists and turns.

  • The president of the United States

  • is not guilty as charged.”

  • In short, expect the unexpected.

  • First, the process.

  • Impeachment is technically only the initial stage.

  • Common misconceptions about impeachment

  • are that impeachment by itself means removal from office.

  • It doesn’t.

  • The impeachment part of the process

  • is only the indictment that sets up a trial.”

  • The Constitution describes offenses

  • that are grounds for removing the president from office

  • as bribery, treason and

  • They say high crimes and misdemeanors,

  • which, really, is in the eye of the beholder.”

  • The framers didn’t give us a guidebook to it.

  • They simply said,

  • that the House had the responsibility

  • for impeachment and the Senate

  • had the responsibility for the trial.”

  • One of the things missing from the Constitution?

  • How an impeachment inquiry should start.

  • And that has generally been a source of drama.

  • Basically, anything goes.

  • In fact, in the Andrew Johnson case

  • they voted to impeach him without even having

  • drafted the articles of impeachment.”

  • For Richard Nixon,

  • his case started with several investigations

  • that led to public hearings.

  • That part of the process went on for two years,

  • and yielded revelation after revelation, connecting Nixon

  • to a politically-motivated burglary at D.N.C. headquarters

  • “… located in the Watergate office building.”

  • and its subsequent cover-up.

  • Mr. Butterfield, are you aware of the installation of any

  • listening devices in the Oval Office of the president?”

  • “I was aware of listening devices. Yes, sir.”

  • This was a shocker.

  • Everybody in the White House recognized

  • how damaging this could be.”

  • As the House drafted articles of impeachment,

  • Nixon lost the support of his party.

  • “O.K.,

  • I shall resign the presidency effective at noon tomorrow.”

  • “I was asked to write the farewell piece that

  • ran the morning after Nixon resigned.

  • And this is what I wrote:

  • The central question is how a man who won so much

  • could have lost so much.”

  • So for Nixon, it more or less ended

  • after the investigations.

  • But for Bill Clinton, that phase was just the beginning.

  • This is the information.”

  • An independent counsel’s investigation

  • into his business dealings unexpectedly

  • turned into a very public inquiry

  • about his personal life.

  • The idea that a president of the United States

  • was having an affair with a White House intern and then

  • a federal prosecutor was looking at that,

  • it was just extraordinary.”

  • That investigation led to public hearings

  • in the House Judiciary Committee.

  • When the Starr Report was being delivered to Congress

  • it was a little bit like the O.J. chase,

  • only a political one.

  • There were two black cars.

  • They were being filmed live on CNN.

  • They were heading towards the Capitol.

  • We were watching it and a little bit agog.”

  • Public opinion is key.

  • And the media plays a huge part in the process.

  • This was definitely true for Clinton.

  • You know it was just a crazy time.

  • We worked in the Senate press gallery."

  • All your colleagues are kind of

  • piled on top of each other.”

  • We had crummy computers, the fax machine would always break.

  • The printer would always break.”

  • After committee hearings,

  • the House brought formal impeachment charges.

  • It was very tense.

  • I thought that the Saturday of the impeachment vote

  • in the House was one of the most tense days

  • I’d experienced in Washington.”

  • And it turned out, also, full of surprises.

  • The day of impeachment arrived, everyone’s making

  • very impassioned speeches about whether Bill Clinton

  • should or should not be impeached

  • and Livingston rises to give an argument for

  • the House Republicans.

  • He started to talk about how Clinton could resign.”

  • You, sir, may resign your post.”

  • And all of a sudden people start booing and saying,

  • Resign, resign’!”

  • So I must set the example.”

  • He announced he was resigning

  • because he had had extramarital affairs

  • and challenged President Clinton to do

  • the only honorable thing, in his view —”

  • “I hope President Clinton will follow.”

  • “— to resign as well, so there was all this drama

  • unfolding even in the midst of impeachment.”

  • Then it went to the Senate for trial.

  • The Constitution gets a little more specific about this part.

  • The Chief Justice of the Supreme Court

  • is supposed to preside over that trial.”

  • Rehnquist, he showed up in this robe he had made for himself,

  • which had gold stripes on the sleeves

  • because he liked Gilbert and Sullivan.”

  • The Senate is the actual jury.”

  • You will do impartial justice according

  • to the Constitution and laws.

  • So help you, God.”

  • This is a copy of the rules of the Senate

  • for handling impeachment.

  • Theyre actually very specific.”

  • Meet six days a week.”

  • Convene at noon.

  • The senators have to sit at their desks

  • and remain quiet in their role as jurors.

  • And not talk, which trust me, is going to be a problem for some

  • of the senators who are used to talking all the time.”

  • It’s just like a courtroom trial.

  • There are prosecutors who present

  • the case against the president.

  • That was perjury.”

  • Only, theyre members of the House,

  • and theyre called managers.

  • Then the senators, or the jurors, vote.

  • And things are still, unpredictable.

  • The options are guilty or not guilty.

  • But there was one senator —”

  • Arlen Specter, a moderate Republican from Pennsylvania.”

  • Under Scottish law,

  • there are three possible verdicts: guilty, not guilty

  • and not proved.”

  • “— which is not a thing.”

  • And everybody just looks, you know, how do you even

  • record that vote?”

  • In the end, there were not enough votes to oust Clinton.

  • What’s amazing about this whole thing to me

  • wasn’t so much the constitutional process.

  • It was that it felt to me like the beginning of really

  • intense partisanship, the weaponization of partisanship.”

  • And here’s the thing:

  • An impeachment charge has never

  • gotten the two-thirds majority it needs in the Senate

  • to actually oust a president from office.

  • So you could end up having a situation where

  • the president is impeached, acquitted

  • and runs for re-election and wins re-election.”

  • And that would be a first.

  • This is my ticket to the impeachment trial

  • of President Bill Clinton.

  • I don’t think youll find these on StubHub.”

Impeachment by its nature, it’s a political process.”

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