The reasons given in the U.S. Constitution are...
According to the constitution, the House of Representatives has the power to impeach federal officials (even the president). The Senate acts as the jury, and (in presidential cases) the Chief Justice acts as the judge.
yes
For lying under oath.
One example of the Judicial Branch checking the Legislative Branch would be the Supreme Court declaring a law unconstitutional and overturning the legislation.
There were resolutions introduced by some members of Congress to impeach President Obama, but none of them gained significant traction or support. Ultimately, no impeachment proceedings were initiated against President Obama during his tenure in office.
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 House of Representatives , which is the lower chamber of the legislative branch of the US government, has the power to impeach the President. Impeachment requires the Senate to hold a trial which upon conviction by 2/3 of the Senate would remove the President from office,
The failure to impeach Andrew Johnson showed that Congress cannot remove the president due to policy disagreements. This would give Congress toomuch power. - Andrew
Congress can impeach the president through a two-step process. First, the House of Representatives must draft and approve articles of impeachment by a simple majority vote, which formally charges the president with misconduct. If the House votes to impeach, the process moves to the Senate, which conducts a trial and ultimately votes on whether to convict. A two-thirds majority in the Senate is required for conviction, which can lead to the president's removal from office.
You would need the state legislature to impeach your governor.
The legislative branch has the right to impeach high ranking officials. Including Federal officers, military generals. But normally for someone to be impeached they must go through a trial, which would be held by the judicial branch. (Court)
In the House of Representative a simple majority vote is required. In 2008 that would be 218 vote. In the Senate a 2/3 majority vote is required for impeachment or 67 of 100 votes.