Article I, Section 5 of the US Constitution requires that 2/3 of the members must vote in favor in order to expel a member. Since there are currently 100 US Senators, 67 would need to vote in favor in order to expel a Senator.
2/3
The senate
yes
To expel a member, two thirds of the House or Senate must agree to the removal.
The power to expel senators lies with the Senate itself. According to the U.S. Constitution, each house of Congress can determine its own rules and has the authority to expel a member by a two-thirds vote. This means that a significant majority of the Senate must agree to expel a senator for it to take place. The process is typically initiated through a resolution and can be influenced by ethical violations or misconduct.
It requires a two-thirds vote of that house.
bla bla bla
two thirds vote
A 2/3 Vote Is Needed.
None. A senator or congressmen cannot be expelled since they were elected by the people for the people. If the controversy is big enough the Senator or congressmen will resign. If a member was expelled then the views of the people from that area would not be expressed. So the people themselves have the right to remove people from office when election rolls around. Ok, so why is it that in order to expel a senator form the Senate, two thirds of the Senate must agree? They can expel, but only with a two thirds vote, setting a very high requirement for a senator to be expelled because, like the previous answer the guy wrote, they were elected for the people by the people, and setting a low requirement by easily expelling a senator, would just indicate that the views of the people from that state area would not be expressed. There is an expel requirement, and you can see that in Article 1, Section 5, Clause 2 of the Constitution
No, NATO does not have the authority to expel a member country from its alliance.
yes