The secretary of state may be removed from office through an impeachment trial.
With the impeachment trial behind us, it was time to address the issue.
President Clinton had almost nothing to say last week about his impeachment trial.
It was the country's first impeachment trial of a state supreme court's chief justice.
But a possible impeachment trial in the Senate could take three to five months.
On January 16, 2001, the impeachment trial has also taken a new direction.
To him, it was all about what an impeachment trial would do to the country, and to the stock market.
With the impeachment trial under way, no one would expect her to give an answer immediately.
The Senate must act now to end this impeachment trial, finally and for all time.
The President had no comment today on the impeachment trial.
They'll be gone by the time the impeachment process is through anyway.
"Willie Dow knows very well what the impeachment process is," he said.
I assume one reason is that the impeachment process would be so destructive to the country.
Certainly the impeachment process is going to be fresh in people's minds.
The impeachment process is not governed by the rules of criminal law.
Respect the impeachment process; the system will work if we let it.
Until he does, the impeachment process is our only protection.
The House has no standing rules dealing with its role in the impeachment process.
Rather, I believe, and we can talk about this later on, the impeachment process itself poses a far greater risk to the rule of law.
The impeachment process is a difficult one and seems not to have been abused over the years.