The warnings are dire, and the stakes are brutal. Donald Trump is openly telling Republicans that if they lose the House,
Democrats will come for him again. Impeachment whispers are back,
louder, angrier, more personal. Yet behind the shouting,
the math, history, and raw political fear tell a more complicated sto… Continues…
Donald Trump is not currently being impeached in 2025 or 2026, but the threat hangs over Washington like a storm that never quite breaks. Democrats such as Rep. Shri Thanedar and Rep. Al Green have filed impeachment resolutions, accusing Trump of abusing power and undermining democracy, yet Republican control of Congress has turned those efforts into symbolic warning shots rather than live ammunition. Key votes to table impeachment resolutions – including those backed by some Democrats – reveal a party divided between moral outrage and cold electoral calculation.
Trump’s past impeachments still shape every move. He was impeached in 2019 over Ukraine and again in 2021 for “incitement to insurrection” after Jan. 6, only to be acquitted twice by the Senate. Those trials left scars on both parties and hardened Trump’s base. Today, impeachment is less a legal endpoint than a permanent shadow over his presidency, a reminder that one election, or a handful of House seats, could flip the script overnight.
Donald Trump is not currently being impeached in 2025 or 2026, but the threat hangs over Washington like a storm that never quite breaks. Democrats such as Rep. Shri Thanedar and Rep. Al Green have filed impeachment resolutions, accusing Trump of abusing power and undermining democracy, yet Republican control of Congress has turned those efforts into symbolic warning shots rather than live ammunition. Key votes to table impeachment resolutions – including those backed by some Democrats – reveal a party divided between moral outrage and cold electoral calculation.
Trump’s past impeachments still shape every move. He was impeached in 2019 over Ukraine and again in 2021 for “incitement to insurrection” after Jan. 6, only to be acquitted twice by the Senate. Those trials left scars on both parties and hardened Trump’s base. Today, impeachment is less a legal endpoint than a permanent shadow over his presidency, a reminder that one election, or a handful of House seats, could flip the script overnight.
Donald Trump is not currently being impeached in 2025 or 2026,
but the threat hangs over Washington like a storm that never quite breaks.
Democrats such as Rep. Shri Thanedar and Rep. Al Green have filed impeachment resolutions,
accusing Trump of abusing power and undermining democracy,
yet Republican control of Congress has turned
those efforts into symbolic warning shots rather than live ammunition.
Key votes to table impeachment resolutions – including those backed by some Democrats – reveal a party divided between moral outrage and cold electoral calculation.
Trump’s past impeachments still shape every move.
He was impeached in 2019 over Ukraine and again in 2021 for
“incitement to insurrection” after Jan. 6, only to be acquitted twice by the Senate.
Those trials left scars on both parties and hardened Trump’s base.
Today, impeachment is less
a legal endpoint than a permanent shadow over his presidency,
a reminder that one election,
or a handful of House seats, could flip the script overnight.