the two steps in taking a high government official, such as a president or a judge, from his position. The first step, impeachment, is a formal accusation by a simple majority of the House of Representatives. This vote leaves the accused in office, while he is “tried” by the Senate. A two-thirds majority vote in the Senate is necessary in order to remove someone from office. In all of American history, “Two Presidents, one Senator, one cabinet officer, and fifteen judges have been impeached, and of those only eight judges have been convicted and removed from office.” The House has “sole power of impeachment.” The House votes on articles of impeachment for “Treason, Bribery, or other high Crimes and Misdemeanors.” If that passes by a simple majority, the President is not yet removed from office, until (and unless) the next step is completed. The impeachment case is sent to the US Senate for trial, over which the Chief Justice of the SCOTUS presides. If the Senate votes by a two-thirds majority to convict, then the person will be removed from office. (Conservapedia)
Chronological History of Events Related to Impeachment

Peruvian Marxist President Pedro Castillo Stages State Coup – Dissolves Congress Hours Before Impeachment Vote

Democrat Committee’s ‘Star’ Witness Caught Lying For Claiming Trump Tried To Hijack Limo On Jan. 6

Trump Impeachment Hearings 2.0 Begin

Senate Votes 55-45 to Set Aside Rand Paul’s Point of Order That Impeachment Unconstitutional – 5 Republicans Vote with Democrats

GOP Lawmaker Marjorie Taylor Greene Introduces Articles of Impeachment on President Joe Biden

Democrats, 10 Republicans Vote for 2nd Impeachment of Trump

Overnight Attorney Sidney Powell Received 40 More Pages of Documents Showing Obama Deep State Wrong Doing

FOIA: DOJ Records Show Weissmann, Other Mueller Henchmen Claimed to Have “Accidentally Wiped” 31+ Phones in Russia Probe

Adam Schiff Says He Has Received a ‘New Whistleblower Complaint’ on Russian Election Meddling, Claims DHS ‘Altered Intel’
