ITT: I don't let arguments die easily.
Well the fact is, a lot of states are arguing that Trump's order breaks the law.
An executive order labeled unconstitutional is not in-and-of-itself, an impeachable offense.
While you are right that unpopularity and desire for impeachment are not themselves causes for impeachment, it's a bit different in this case. Typically, as far as I know, people opposed to the President won't say the President deserves to be impeached on principle.
From where I'm standing this is essentially the vote of no confidence metric, since we don't actually have that in the US system normally. Trump is not just taking actions I am politically opposed to, he is demonstrably unfit for office. And getting more so every day...
The US does not have a vote of no confidence because in the US the President is directly elected. What you're talking about is the results of a direct election (and in fact, the only election which everyone in every state may vote in) being overturned by an act of Congress, on the basis that Congress believes that America made a bad decision. That is not a precedent I wish to see set, period. If you believe America
should have recall elections for President (which is what the alternative to no-confidence is in the states), that's fine; but we don't right now so it's an academic point at best.
Clinton was nearly impeached on far more nebulous grounds than Trump is providing.
Clinton
was impeached. Impeachment is not removal from office; if the measure fails in the Senate they are acquitted and maintain office, but the impeachment itself still stands. There have thus been two impeachments in American history, both on purely political grounds: the Impeachment of Andrew Johnson (which failed in the Senate by
1 vote, exactly enough Republicans crossed party lines to stop it), and Bill Clinton (Nixon resigned before they had a chance). But this is not relevant.
What is relevant is that the argument that there were more spurious impeachments in the past is unconvincing; you're asking to set a precedent here (no President has ever been removed from office, ever, period), and a better reason is needed. I want someone to explain to me why this won't be used again as a weapon in the future by Congress to remove Presidents they don't like, given they've already tried it twice and nearly succeeded once. I want someone to explain to me why Trump supporters won't take to the streets and express their opposition through violence (or failing that, why precisely having violent people in the streets is something I shouldn't be worried about, which is what Ispil's "If they want to, let 'em" argument implied).
A way of solving all of those problems at once is for Trump to be found guilty of some Watergate-tier crime. This may be right around the corner for all we know, and perhaps the world would be better for it. But impeachment for anything less than absolutely ironclad, "throw-away-the-key" level criminality would tear the country apart. I say they let Trump have his rope, and if he should hang himself with it, life will be much smoother for all involved
Devil's Advocate time: does Trump deserve to be impeached, really?
Well he doesn't respect the independence of the courts, also he's gutted the state department, thus allowing his inner circle to basically write doctrine without any input from existing foreign policy experts, and all the executive orders have not had any vetting or feedback from the various organizations authorized to carry them out. None of that is normal. He also removed the military from having any input in the NSA, while his senior advisors also float the idea that he gets his own personal secret police unit. So basically, they're cutting out all the upward flow of information and basically trying to be dictators who rule by fiat / decree, with the monkeys expected to merely carry out orders without question.
"Deserves" to be impeach? Fucking definitely deserves it.
Poor wording on my part. Deserve is a moral judgement. Impeachment is a political/legal judgement.
Reminder: It's on all of us to keep this thread calm if it is to survive the Trump age; things are more heated now than ever, and it would be better to keep this thread open if possible, and that demands more patience, not less. Arguments directed
at individuals is counter-productive. And people are wrong on the internet; we all have to live with that, at least until I learn how to deliver punches through wifi (oh, but
after that, all bets are off).