Zaune wrote: ↑2021-01-27 01:33pm
I must admit I'm confused as to how impeaching an
ex-President works, legally speaking. Can he not be prosecuted for misconduct in office as a private citizen now that he's left?
Legally speaking, there's nothing stopping the Justice Department from launching an investigation into Trump's presidency that would lead to them levelling criminal charges against him and having him perp-walked out of Mar-a-Lago by US Marshals.
It wouldn't be done ... the US has a long tradition of not doing so, since any such criminal prosecution would be immediately, and chiefly, seen as political; and could open a whole can of worms (such as Presidents having their predecessors dragged into court as political payback, or Presidents seeking to stay in power to avoid prosecution.)
(It should be said that this doesn't apply to the investigations Trump faces in New York, because A) He's being investigated for actions taken outside his time as President and B) States Rights.)
However, let's assume Trump gets arrested, charged, and convicted for his various criminal mischiefs done as Commander-in-Chief. There's literally nothing in the US Constitution barring convicted felons from running for President, including our hypothetical orange shit-gibbon in his orange prison jumpsuit!
The end-goal of impeaching Trump again was to, hopefully, bar him from running for office again.
(Of course, as has been said, the Republicans are being deliberately obtuse when they bleat about the constitutionality of impeaching an ex-President. Trump was still in office when he was impeached the second time!)