Impeachment Process

Impeachment is Congress’s most serious check on executive and judicial power. It’s a constitutional process — not a criminal one — designed to remove officials who commit “high crimes and misdemeanors.”

1. Constitutional Foundation
The authority for impeachment comes from Articles I and II of the U.S. Constitution.
  • The House of Representatives has the “sole power of impeachment.”
  • The Senate has the “sole power to try all impeachments.”
  • Impeachment applies to the President, Vice President, and all civil officers.
The framers intended impeachment as a last resort for grave misconduct — not policy disagreements.
2. Investigation and Articles of Impeachment
The process begins with an investigation, usually led by the House Judiciary Committee or a special panel.
  • Evidence is gathered through hearings, subpoenas, and reports.
  • If grounds exist, specific articles of impeachment are drafted and voted on in committee.
These articles function as formal charges — similar to an indictment in criminal law.
3. House Vote
The full House debates and votes on each article.
  • A simple majority vote is required to impeach.
  • If approved, the official is formally impeached — the equivalent of being “charged.”
The process then moves across the Capitol for trial in the Senate.
4. Senate Trial
The Senate conducts a trial presided over by the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court (for presidential impeachments).
  • House members act as prosecutors (“managers”).
  • The accused may have legal counsel and present a defense.
  • Senators serve as jurors and must take an oath of impartiality.
The trial is both legal and political — reflecting the unique powers of Congress.
5. Conviction and Removal
A two-thirds vote in the Senate is required to convict and remove the official.
  • If convicted, the official is immediately removed from office.
  • The Senate may also vote to disqualify the person from holding future federal office.
Conviction removes the official but does not carry criminal penalties — those are handled separately in court.
6. Historical Precedent
Impeachment has been used sparingly in U.S. history.
  • Three presidents (Andrew Johnson, Bill Clinton, Donald Trump) were impeached, none convicted.
  • President Richard Nixon resigned before a likely impeachment vote.
  • Several federal judges have been removed through impeachment.
The rarity of conviction reflects how high the bar is set — and how serious the process is meant to be.