The answer is YES. The HOUSE has the sole power of impeachment. And the SENATE decides the case in impeachment.
The impeachment of government officials is done in the House of Representatives. The case will be tried in the Senate.
The House of Representatives has sole authority to bring Articles of Impeachment (like a grand jury indictment) against the President and other government officials. If the House votes in favor of impeachment, the case proceeds to trial in the Senate. No one can be removed from office by impeachment (the first step in the process) alone.
the house of representatives is the sole power of impeachment in our government
The House and Senate in separate proceedings
The House of Representatives is the one that can impeach the president or other federal officials.
if it is an impeachment case for a president the the house of representatives accuse the president and the senate tries them
The House of Representatives act as the grand jury charging him or her with impeachment and the Senate is then the jury.
The Senate and House of Representatives are government institutions which can initiate the impeachment of the president. This is an extreme measure which requires complete backing by both.
It is the House of Representatives that has the power to impeach a president. His or her trial is then held in the United States Senate.
The impeachment process begins with a bill in the House of Representatives and concludes with a trial in the Senate.
the house of representatives writes up the charges, and the senate tries the case.
The US House of Representatives has the sole power of impeachment in the case of the President and other federal office holders. Impeachment is the equivalent of an indictment and can be voted only by the US House of Representatives. If the House votes to impeach a president, then a trial is held in the Senate and 2/3 majority is required to conviction and and removal from office.