Andrew Johnson and Bill Clinton. Neither was convicted though, and Andrew Johnson was 1 vote away from being convicted. :P
Andrew Johnson and Bill Clinton
Clinton and Andrew Johnson.
Impeachment is only the first step toward removing a President from office. Impeachment by the House (like a grand jury indictment) is followed by a trial in Senate and conviction by the Senate is required in order to force the president out of office. Impeachment requires only a simple majority, but conviction requires that two-thirds of the voting Senators vote to convict.
Bill Clinton and Andrew Johnson are the only two presidents who have gone through the entire impeachment process. They were both acquitted in the end and not impeached. President Nixon was going to be impeached but he resigned before it was announced.
The process is often called impeachment, but actually impeachment by Congress is only the first stage of the removal process. After impeachment a trial is held by the senate which hears the evidence and then votes. Two-thirds most vote for conviction in order to remove the president.
Andrew Johnson, Richard Nixon
trysinie, and national humilation.
Impeachment of the President has nothing to do with approval rating. Impeachment is a criminal proceeding against a sitting president. There have been two in US history, Andrew Johnson and Bill Clinton; both were acquitted.
If you mean after the impeachment of the President, the answer is "The Executive" branch. The are two stages of "impeachment". The first is "impeachment", whereby the House of Representatives, by 2/3 majority, calls on the president to be tried before the Senate. The senate then tries the president. The President heads the executive branch. If he is impeached, and convicted by the Senate, he is immediately removed from office and the Vice President assumes presidential powers. If the President is impeached, but not convicted, he is not removed from office and continues as President.
Impeachment and 2/3 vote to overrule veto.
Andrew Johnson and John Kennedy
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.
Up until 1867, the impeachment process had been used sparingly. Only Federal judges had been impeached. There was some sentiment in the US Senate to not have President Johnson face impeachment. The idea of it according to some in the Senate was that it would be too embarrassing to press charges against a US President. A few voices believed that it was a wiser move to simply bear Johnson's presidency for another two years rather than to impeach him.
The main roles are to be the formal President of the Senate and to become President if a sitting President dies, resigns, or is removed from office by the impeachment process.