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Founders: Removal from office is not the only purpose of impeachment

As Congress moves toward a possible formal impeachment of President Donald Trump, they should consider words spoken at the Constitutional Convention, when the Founders explained that impeachment was intended to have many important purposes, not just removing a president from office.

A critical debate took place on July 20, 1787, which resulted in adding the impeachment clause to the U.S. Constitution. Benjamin Franklin, the oldest and probably wisest delegate at the Convention, said that when the president falls under suspicion, a “regular and peaceable inquiry” is needed.

In my work as a law professor studying original texts about the U.S. Constitution, I’ve found statements made at the Constitutional Convention explaining that the Founders viewed impeachment as a regular practice with three purposes:

    • To remind both the country and the president that he is not above the law
    • To deter abuses of power
    • To provide a fair and reliable method to resolve suspicions about misconduct.

View the complete September 26 article by Clark D. Cunningham, W. Lee Burge Chair in Law and Ethics; Director, National Institute for Teaching Ethics and Professionalism, Georgia State University.

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