The US Senate tries government officials who have been impeached by the House of Representatives, and may remove them from office if they find just cause.
the house of representatives has the power of impeachment and the senate has the sole power to try an impeached officer
the president person
House of Representatives
The trial of an impeached official (President, Vice President, cabinet official, member of Congress, or Federal judge) would take place in the US Senate.
The Senate tries federal office holders who have been impeached by the House.
I think you're discussing Presidential impeachment, answer is both houses of Congress. House of Representatives actually 'impeaches' the President (essentially charging him or her) and the Senate holds the trial and if convicted, the President is removed from office. The Vice President can also be impeached as well as officers of the United States. Technically, the term impeachment is mis-used, but it has been mis-used so often, it essentially refers to the involuntary removal of the president.
The US Senate tries government officials who have been impeached by the House of Representatives, and may remove them from office if they find just cause.
Senate
Impeachment is a power that allows formal charges to be brought against the President or other civil officer in a governing position. The power of impeachment lies in the House of Representatives and not the Senate. In return the Senate has the power to try the impeachment. The removal of the impeached official also lies in the Senate. Keep in mind that impeachment does not necessarily mean the removal of the official. It just means that charges have been brought onto the official.
The US Senate has the sole power to try impeachment cases for federal officials.
They see what the public official has done to be impeached
The Senate