• Melllvar
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    4810 months ago

    On the contrary, Congress is expressly forbidden from deciding whether someone is guilty of a crime.

    • @DigitalFrank
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      -2910 months ago

      IMPEACHMENT has entered the chat.

      • Melllvar
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        4410 months ago

        Impeachment is expressly not a criminal procedure. It can’t result in prison or fines, nor can it can’t be pardoned by the President.

        • @DigitalFrank
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          -21
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          10 months ago

          But it is the process by which a candidate can be removed from the ballot.

          So if you want to go with Trump is criminally guilty of insurrection, and therefore ineligible to be on the ballot, when and where was the trial?

          • Melllvar
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            1910 months ago

            Being convicted of a crime doesn’t disqualify anyone; people have run for President from prison. And most of the people who attacked Congress on Jan. 6 would not be disqualified for it even if they are convicted of a crime for it.

            Disqualification is not a criminal punishment. It’s not a crime to be 34 years old, for example, or to have been born in another country. But those are still disqualifications, and they are and always have been enforced by the states.

            • @DigitalFrank
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              -1010 months ago

              The specific crimes I was thinking of were: impeachment for high crimes and misdemeanors or criminal conviction for treason.

              • Melllvar
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                810 months ago

                “High crimes and misdemeanors” is a term of art that refers to acts committed by a public official which, while not necessarily a crime in themselves, are a violation of public trust.

                For example, a president that accepted a foreign title of nobility without Congressional consent would have committed a high crime, but they couldn’t be hauled into a criminal court for it.

                • @DigitalFrank
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                  -1010 months ago

                  Right.

                  Congress would control that, just like determining an insurrection was committed.

                  They didn’t do that.

                  The media did.

                  • Melllvar
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                    1010 months ago

                    The only thing Congress can do is remove Trump’s disqualification under the 14th amendment. They can’t decide whether he’s disqualified in the first place.

            • @DigitalFrank
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              -610 months ago

              One judge “finds” he did it. What a lovely country we would have if that’s all it took. No defense, no evidence needed. Just a judges opinion.

              Short slope to a work camp. Maybe we could sort of concentrate all the people we disagree with in one.

              • Optional
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                510 months ago

                All fair points that still ignore the guy who tried to overthrow the country where absolutely nothing was done about him, to hold him accountable.

                If the feds are saying only they can protect the country from all enemies orange and domestic, there’s about 80 million active voters who might, uh, decidedly disagree. As opposed to some other adverb.

                • @jj4211
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                  210 months ago

                  Point is that if the three blue states disqualify without a federal ruling and that stands, then you can bet a bunch of red states will declare Biden disqualified because he stole the election or some crap.

                  The place to direct frustration is the federal government for failing to make the requisite determination. Not at the unanimous supreme court decision that prevents chaotic behavior by the states with respect to federal races. There should be consistency state to state as to whether a candidate is fundamentally qualified or not.

                • @DigitalFrank
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                  -910 months ago

                  If O’l Joe has 80 million voters, why are you worried about Trump being on the ballot? He can’t possibly win.