Yes, why not . . , ? ?he can be removed by the president on the recommendation of the parliament.
If the President is the one impeached, the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court presides over the trial.
Yes, why not . . , ? ?he can be removed by the president on the recommendation of the parliament.
No. The only exclusive power of the Chief Justice is to preside over the trial of an impeached President.
The chief justice of the US presides of the trial if the president is impeached.
The Chief Justice is nominated by the US President with the "advice and consent" of the Senate after a sitting Chief Justice dies, retires, or is impeached. When the new Chief Justice is someone already sitting on the bench as an Associate Justice, his or her promotion is referred to an an "elevation," rather than an "appointment."
The only exclusive power of the Chief Justice is to preside over the trial of an impeached President. For more information, see Related Questions, below.
The only exclusive power of the Chief Justice is to preside over the trial of an impeached President. For more information, see Related Questions, below.
John G. Roberts, Jr. is Chief Justice of the United States in 2011. He succeeded William H. Rehnquist in this position in 2005, and will remain Chief Justice until he dies, resigns, retires or (unlikely) is impeached and removed from office.
All impeachment trials are overseen by the Chief Justice of the US Supreme Court.
Only if the current Chief Justice (John G. Roberts, Jr.) dies, retires, resigns or is impeached while President Obama is still in office.
The House of Representatives impeaches the president and The Senate acts as the jury. The Supreme Court Justice is the judge.
after jhon f kenity was killed