Charges against any Federal government officer, including the President of the US, are submitted to the US House [of Representatives] Committee on the Judiciary by members of the House, which are then discussed/debated in committee.
If the charges are considered by the committee to be serious enough to warrant impeachment, they are so reported, along with the number of "yeas" and "nays," and of the members voting each way for each charge presented. If a majority of the US House votes to indict or accuse the president of what they deem impeachable offenses, s/he is indicted, or more properly, "impeached." S/he is not removed from office at this point, but continues to carry on the business of his/her office with no reduction in salary or benefits or authority
Throughout our national history a number of federal judges have been removed from office this way; two presidents (Andrew Johnson and William Clinton) were formally impeached but were NOT convicted, I.E., removed, from the Presidency.
Upon the indictment, the impeachment process moves to the US Senate. One or more of the House members, usually chosen from those who presented the charges in the House, will serve as "managers;" in other court settings they would be called "prosecutors." If the POTUS (President of the United States) is being tried, the Chief Justice will preside; in other cases the Vice-President or the senior senator of the majority party (the President PRO TERMPORE) presides. Each senator serves as a juror. After the managers and the official's attorneys present their cases, each senator shall vote either to acquit the official (to dismiss all charges against him/her) or to convict him/her (remove him/her from the office s/he holds).
Conviction (removal) requires 2/3 vote of the jury (which when all 100 senators are present, 67 votes are needed to convict). Although this conviction "fires" the official and disqualifies him/her from holding any office of profit or trust under the US Constitution, no further charges, of either a criminal or civil (lawsuit) nature, are pursued by the US Congress. The convicted official may, however, be tried for crimes separately by the Justice Departments of the US or of the several states.
Impeachment process is started by Congress & official is tried by the Senate.
Impeachment means to bring a formal charge of criminal wrongdoing against an elected official (you are thinking of the President). It does NOT mean trying them. The House of Representatives conducts Impeachment proceedings. If the President were impeached by them (has happened 2 times) then the President would be tried by the Senate.
tried in the Senate
The House of Representatives "accuses" an official of wrongdoing by bringing articles of impeachment against him (or her). If a simple majority of the House votes for impeachment (to bring charges against), then the official would go on trial in the Senate.Article I of the Constitution gives the House of Representatives the sole power of impeachment.
, which has the power to initiate impeachment proceedings. If a majority of the House votes to impeach the president, the case is then tried in the Senate. A two-thirds majority vote in the Senate is required to convict and remove the president from office.
After a government official is impeached in the House, the official will be tried in the Senate. Two U.S. Presidents have been impeached. They are Bill Clinton and Andrew Johnson.
Impeach means to bring charges against the holder of a public office, usually the president. The House of Representatives has the power to impeach, while the Senate decides whether or not to remove from office.
The US Constitution gives the House of Representativessole authority to begin impeachment proceedings. If a simple majority of the House votes to impeach, the Senate holds a removal trial.
It means that the official to whom the impeachment applies has the right to a trial. The impeachment alone means nothing; it is only the first part of a two-part phase. In fact, impeachment is merely only the bringing of charges against a public official. Look at it as though that any citizen after being arrested for a crime still has to be tried for that offense in order to establish guilt or innocence.
The impeachment of government officials is done in the House of Representatives. The case will be tried in the Senate.
they can only, at that time be removed from office
The senate
Impeachment. Only the House of Representatives can impeach the president, and the impeachment is just the bringing of charges against the president. The Senate and the Senate alone then decides whether or not the president is guilty. Clinton was impeached, but was not found guilty by the Senate.