"Under the U.S. Constitution, the House of Representatives has the power to formally charge a
federal officer with wrongdoing, a process known as impeachment. The House impeaches an
individual when a majority agrees to a House resolution containing explanations of the charges.
The explanations in the resolution are referred to as “articles of impeachment.” After the House
agrees to impeach an officer, the role of the Senate is to conduct a trial to determine whether the
charged individual should be removed from office. Removal requires a two-thirds vote in the
Senate.
The House impeachment process generally proceeds in three phases: (1) initiation of the
impeachment process; (2) Judiciary Committee investigation, hearings, and markup of articles of
impeachment; and (3) full House consideration of the articles of impeachment.
Impeachment proceedings are usually initiated in the House when a Member submits a resolution through the hopper (in the
same way that all House resolutions are submitted). A resolution calling for the impeachment of an officer will be referred to
the Judiciary Committee; a resolution simply authorizing an investigation of an officer will be referred to the Rules
Committee. In either case, the committee could then report a privileged resolution authorizing the investigation. In the past,
House committees, under their general investigatory authority, have sometimes sought information and researched charges
against officers prior to the adoption of a resolution to authorize an impeachment investigation.
Impeachment proceedings could also be initiated by a Member on the floor. A Member can offer an impeachment resolution
as a “Question of the Privileges of the House.” The House, when it considers a resolution called up this way, might
immediately vote to refer it to the Judiciary Committee, leaving the resolution in the same status as if it had been submitted
through the hopper. Alternatively, the House might vote to table the impeachment resolution. The House could also vote
directly on the resolution, but in modern practice, it has not chosen to approve articles of impeachment called up in this
fashion. Instead, the House has relied on the Judiciary Committee to first conduct an investigation, hold hearings, and report
recommendations to the full House..."
Impeachment
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