Andrew Johnson 1865 and Bill Clinton. Nixon would have been impeached if he hadn't resigned.
Andrew Johnson, Richard Nixon
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.
1867=Andrew Johnson
Andrew Johnson, following the Civil War and Bill Clinton, in 1998-1999. And that's a real shame, because the Founders intended that impeachment be used fairly regularly to remove people from office who had no business conducting the affairs of the United States.
Andrew Johnson, Richard Nixon
The process is impeachment by the House of Representatives followed by a trial and conviction by the US Senate. People often think of impeachment as being the entire process.
Federalists like Alexander Hamilton and other Framers did discuss having the US Supreme Court handle the impeachment process. They believed as Hamilton did that the Court should not be involved. Actually, Hamilton wrote in the Federalist Papers, that impeachment was more than just an issue regarding the breaking of a law. Hamilton wrote that impeachment was primarily a political process to engage the interest of the entire US community.
1867=Andrew Johnson
Franklin Delano Roosevelt
The presidents of Romania are elected by the vote of the entire population above 18 years.
Impeachment, which is the Constitutional process whereby the U.S. Congress charges and tries public officials for "high crimes and misdemeanors", and, if convicted, removes them from office. The U.S. House drafts the Articles of Impeachment, and the U.S. Senate tries them, and in the case of the President of the United States, the Chief Justice of the United States presides over the proceedings.Read Nixon v. United States, 506 U.S. 224 (1993).
Andrew Johnson our 17th President also went though impeachment process but got cleared by one vote of the Senate. This happened twice, with Andrew Johnson and again with Bill Clinton. In both cases the Senate failed to convict, so the presidents remained in office until their terms expired.