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this POS Bush or even have it on its Agenda?

If you are not a voting Democrat please do not answer this question.

thank you,

2007-03-09 01:57:19 · 10 answers · asked by Anonymous in Politics & Government Politics

10 answers

Stop his agenda, make him a lame duck, anything besides letting him continue on his warpath.

This is how representative democracy works IMHO, if you go in as a hard-liner then you are going to end up a loser.

2007-03-09 02:01:23 · answer #1 · answered by ck4829 7 · 2 0

No, I'm not.

Here's why. By the time there was an investigation and then an impeachment trial, Bush would be out of office. You cannot impeach a former President, nor can you remove him from office.

To try to perform some kind of witchhunt to find a U.S. crime that he has committed (since those are the only crimes over which we have jurisdiction to charge and prosecute him for) would be an enormous waste of time and resources that we simply cannot afford to fritter away.

I want to see my party rise above the slime that the Republican party couldn't resist back in the late '90s when it went after Clinton. Clinton was impeached only after backed into a corner and interrogated under oath about his sex life. Imagine, a United States President having to talk publicly about a b-job. How embarrassing.

But I digress. I would rather see the Democratic Congress focus on what is important and immediate to the American people. Bush will only be in office for another year and a half. We can hang in there until then, particularly since now I have more confidence in our system of checks and balances than I did last October.

2007-03-09 10:07:29 · answer #2 · answered by Bush Invented the Google 6 · 1 0

They DO wish to impeach, but it's a grueling, arduous process. No doubt that the House has enough Democratic members to impeach. However, a conviction from the Senate is unlikely. Hopefully, as Congress continues with multiple investigations of Bush's seedy activities, Congress will be able to build a case so compelling that even Republican Senators will be forced to convict him. Timing is everything.

2007-03-09 10:07:21 · answer #3 · answered by Hemingway 4 · 2 0

No, I'm not disappointed, although I think that he is doing a terrible job and I knew he would once he was voted in. But i mean elections are coming up anyways and by the time the process gets put to action what point will it make. Just let him finish his turn and be thankful that there will not be another Bush in office.

2007-03-09 10:02:34 · answer #4 · answered by Francisco R 2 · 1 0

We would rather solve the problems of this country, not engage in another circus like we saw in the GOP folly of Clinton's impeachment. The entire world laughed at us for being such ninnies. Let the GOP continue to be ninnies, let's make the country better, safer and freer. Bush has 22 months left.

Now this all flies out the window if the Dummy invades Iran, mind you.

2007-03-09 10:02:30 · answer #5 · answered by iwasnotanazipolka 7 · 3 0

I'm disappointed they haven't sent him to the electric chair ! Just look at how many of our friends and family he's slaughtered just to put money in his pocket !

2007-03-09 10:46:00 · answer #6 · answered by mikey 3 · 1 0

Pelosi put an end to this when she became speaker. Too derisive and self serving.

2007-03-09 10:01:53 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

No, cause the alternative is president Cheney!

2007-03-09 10:01:39 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 2 1

yes.

2007-03-09 10:01:44 · answer #9 · answered by AlphaMale 2 · 1 0

VIVA LA REVOLUTION!!!!!

2007-03-09 10:00:41 · answer #10 · answered by tyron 1 · 1 0

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