The constitutional rules that allow the Senate to pretty much invent its own impeachment procedure

The constitutional rules that allow the Senate to pretty much invent its own impeachment procedure

Noah Feldman writes:

The jockeying has already begun over the structure of President Donald Trump’s Senate trial. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has discussed it with the White House counsel; Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer has sent McConnell a letter proposing detailed protocols. All this action, even before the House of Representatives has formally impeached Trump, might be making you wonder: Isn’t there some pre-existing trial protocol required by the Constitution? Do we really have to have a debate about how the trial is going to run before it actually happens?

The short answers are no, there isn’t a clear constitutional mandate for what the Senate trial should look like; and yes, there really does have to be a fight about what procedures the Senate will use in trying Trump. This seems like a crazy way to do things, but it reflects the framers’ recognition that impeachment as they knew it from England had always had a political side, and their reticence about putting too much detail in the Constitution.

The Constitution in article I, section 3 gives the Senate “the sole Power to try all Impeachments.” Then it provides just three brief rules about the trial itself. [Continue reading…]

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