>>24287109
Expulsion. ChYnA Bitch. How many should be Expelled? Per Q? 70%
Did we get to Vote, on Deals being offered to those 70%? No. Corrupt is corrupt and for the sake of Protection of our Country, those we actually voted into office, need to act on behalf of this country, and not on Ego to protect the illusion that 1. Election fuckery hasn't eroded our Government. (Which it has) 2. Crimes by Government Employees will be Judicated, just as it would for any one of us. Special Favor, to save face, is not "EQUAL RIGHTS UNDER THE LAW."
The history of the Expulsion Clause suggests that the expulsion power is broad and confers to each house of Congress significant discretion as to the proper grounds for which a Member may be expelled. Accordingly, courts generally have declined to adjudicate the standards by which expulsions might be considered in the House or Senate. To date, 20 Members of Congress have been expelled: 5 in the House and 15 in the Senate. A large majority of those expulsions were predicated on Members' behavior deemed to be disloyal to the United States at the outset of the Civil War. Nonetheless, the two most recent expulsions followed Members' convictions on public corruption charges.
xpulsion is the most serious form of disciplinary action that can be taken against a member of Congress.[1] The United States Constitution (Article I, Section 5, Clause 2) provides that "Each House [of Congress] may determine the Rules of its proceedings, punish its members for disorderly behavior, and, with the concurrence of two-thirds, expel a member." The process for expulsion from the House of Representatives differs somewhat from the process for expulsion from the Senate.[2]