Trump impeachment: House impeaches president in historic vote along party lines
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Your support makes all the difference.The House has voted to impeach Donald Trump, making him the third president in American history to receive such a censure.
After roughly eight hours of debate, the House of Representatives gathered to vote and ultimately charged him with abusing the power of his office by attempting to extort a political favour from Ukraine. The House then voted on a second article of impeachment, approving formal charges that Mr Trump had obstructed Congress during the subsequent congressional investigation into his conduct.
The Senate will now take up the approved impeachment articles in the new year.
Defiant as ever, Mr Trump walked onstage at a rally in Michigan just as the House began voting — and was bragging about his Space Force and mocking stock market jitters as the first article of impeachement was approved. Before it became official, as the vote crept towards approving the first article of impeachment, Mr Trump was interrupted by a protester, who he suggested was treated too well by security forces — and that they should have been tougher on her.
Before the vote and rally, Washington Post columnist David Ignatius described a letter sent by Mr Trump to House speaker Nancy Pelosi on Tuesday as “the most unpresidential presidential document ever written” on MSNBC’s Morning Joe after rallies backing the impeachment process were held in cities across the country on Tuesday evening.
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During her press conference Nancy Pelosi refused to offer up a timetable for sending over impeachment articles to the Senate.
But, she promises they will not be sent "tonight".
She also spoke to the late Elijah Cummings, telling the House's "North Star" that they did all they could: "We passed the two articles of impeachment. The president is impeached."
In declining to say when the House will send over impeachment articles to the Senate, Ms Pelosi was trying to make a point that she would not allow the Senate to take up the measure until they can be sure of a fair trial.
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