He is impeached or charged by the House and convicted by the Senate.
No, the president does not have the power to remove the vice president from office. The only way a vice president can be removed is through the impeachment process by Congress.
Yes, individuals can sue a government agency for damages or wrongdoing through a legal process known as a lawsuit.
No, the president does not have the power to remove the vice president from office. The only way the vice president can be removed from office is through the impeachment process by Congress.
The President may be removed before the expiry of his/her term through impeachment. A President can be removed for violation of the Constitution. The process may start in either of the two houses of the Parliament. The house initiates the process by levelling the charges against the President. The charges are contained in a notice which has to be signed by at least one quarter of the total members of that house. The notice is sent up to the President and 14 days later, it is taken up for consideration. A resolution to impeach the President has to be passed by a two-third majority of the total members of the originating house. It is then sent to the other house. The other house investigates the charges that have been made. During this process, the President has the right to defend himself/herself through an authorised counsel. If the second house also approves the charges made by two-third majority again, the President stands impeached and is deemed to have vacated his/her office from the date when such a resolution stands passed. Other than impeachment, no other penalty can be given to the President for the violation of the Constitution.
through impeachment.It is possible for a US President to be removed from office by the Congress, using a complicated procedure designed to prevent a president from being removed just because he is unpopular , but because he is evil or truly incompetent. The process starts with an impeachment bill in the lower House that defines the charges against the president. The Senate then must hold a trial based on the charges and act as jury with a 2/3 vote necessary to convict.
The president, vice-president and federal judges can be removed from office for committing crimes. First the person must be officially charged with a crime or crimes, this is called impeachment, and then the person must stand trial in the Senate where a conviction requires a 2/3 vote. Members of Congress, however, are not subject to this process.
The process for removing the President begins with the House passing a bill of impeachment. That requires the Senate to hold a trial. After all the evidence is presented, the Senators vote of whether to convict. If 2/3 of those voting, vote to convict, the President is removed from office.
No, the Commandant of the US Marine Corps does not have the authority to relieve the President of the United States from their position. The President can only be removed through the process of impeachment by the Congress or resignation.
Impeachment is the name for the formal levying of charges against a President by the House of Representatives. An impeached President is then tried by the Senate and if 2/3 of the senators find him guilty, he is removed from office. No President has ever been removed from office by the Senate.
Sediment is removed from its source through the process of Erosion.
President Millard Fillmore was a 4th cousin 3 times removed of President John Adams and 5th cousin 2 times removed of his son President John Quincy Adams through their common ancestor of Henry Squire. President Millard Fillmore was a 9th cousin 1 time removed of President Richard M. Nixon through their common ancestors of Thomas and Alice Perkins. President Millard Fillmore was a 4th cousin 4 times removed from President Herbert Walker Bush and 4th cousin 5 times removed from President George Walker Bush through their common ancestors of Robert and Elizabeth (Sabin) Millard.
Impeachment is the process by which the president would be removed from office. It does not carry a prison term. A term of imprisionment would be imposed for the crimes he/she is removed for at a separate criminal trial. If Bill Clinton would have been impeached and removed from office, a separate criminal trial would have been held to try him on the charge of perjury