No. Impeachment isn't a legal proceeding, but a political process used to remove an official from public office. The Constitution gave exclusive authority over impeachment to Congress, the Legislative branch of government. The US Supreme Court has no authority or jurisdiction over such matters.
This question was explored in Nixon v. United States, 506 US 224 (1993) [No relation to former US President Richard Nixon, see United States v. Nixon, (1974)]. An impeached Mississippi US District Court judge, Walter Nixon, appealed the Senate's impeachment ruling to the US Supreme Court. The Court held that impeachment proceedings are non-justiciable, and are political matters, or the province of Congress. The 1993 Nixon case set a formal precedent preventing officials from appealing their impeachment in court.
For more information, see Related Questions, below.
SENATE!
Federal officials can be impeached in the House of Representatives. If a simple majority of the House votes for impeachment, the official proceeds to trial in the Senate.
Andrew Jackson
The House of Representatives is where impeachment of a federal official begins. The House has the power to impeach, but the Senate decides whether or not to remove the official from office if he or she is impeached by the House.
Only the House of Representatives may impeach a federal official. The 16 federal officials impeached to date include two Presidents, Andrew Johnson & Bill Clinton.
The Supreme court decision on Marbury version Madison by the federal judiciary. This is part of the court systems.
The House of Representatives is where impeachment of a federal official begins. The House has the power to impeach, but the Senate decides whether or not to remove the official from office if he or she is impeached by the House.
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 high federal official who was impeached by the House of Representatives in 1867 was Andrew Johnson, the 17th President of the United States. He became the first U.S. president to be impeached after violating the Tenure of Office Act. However, he was acquitted by the Senate and remained in office.
Yes, the US Supreme Court has the authority to overrule a state supreme court's decision if it involves a federal law or constitutional issue.
It strengthened the powers of the federal government.
it strengthened the powers of the federal government