New Bill Seeks To Force Donald Trump’s Resignation

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Chris Riotta
Displayed with permission from Newsweek

Talk of unseating Donald Trump from the presidency erupted shortly after after his shocking electoral victory, as Democratic representatives called for his impeachment on the floor of Congress just four months into his tenure in the White House.

But the 25th Amendment provides another pathway for the president’s removal—and lawmakers want to use it

Related: Al Gore’s Advice to Donald Trump: Resign

Rep. Zoe Lofgren (D-CA) introduced legislation Friday calling on Vice President Mike Pence and the White House Cabinet to ask for the president’s resignation, questioning Trump’s mental stability after a bizarre series of press conferences this week in which he repeatedly defended a group of violent white supremacists who wreaked havoc Saturday in Charlottesville, Virginia.

“Trump has exhibited an alarming pattern of behavior and speech causing concern that a mental disorder may have rendered him unfit and unable to fulfill his Constitutional duties,” Lofgren wrote in the bill provided to Vox on Friday morning. It goes on to encourage Pence and Trump’s Cabinet “to quickly secure the services of medical and psychiatric professionals to examine the President to assist in their deliberations under the 25th Amendment to determine whether the President suffers from mental disorder or other injury that impairs his abilities and prevents him from discharging his Constitutional duties.”

The 25th Amendment, created in 1967 and used six times since, gives the vice president of the United States and eight Cabinet members the authority to remove the president from the Oval Office if they render he or she is “unable to discharge the powers and duties of his office.” It’s typically implemented when a president is undergoing a medical procedure, and was utilized three times for the colonoscopies of former Presidents Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush.

The amendment was also used three times under former President Richard Nixon; once, to officiate the nomination of Vice President Gerald Ford on November 27, 1973, avoiding a Democratic replacement to the Republican commander in chief.

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