The National Archives reported on Saturday, January 9, that Senator McConnell is circulating memos about impeaching President Trump.
Media reports indicate that soon-to-be Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) is circulating plans to impeach President Trump while Twitter, Facebook, Instant Messenger and virtually every other major tech site works to remove President Trump from their platforms.
A memo from McConnell, obtained by The Washington Post, in which the senator who presided over an incredible 2018 midterm election followed by bad elections in 2020 and 2021, explains the Senate’s impeachment process against President Trump.
The memo reads, “It will require the consent of all 100 Senators to conduct any kind of operation during the docket sessions scheduled prior to January 19, and therefore the consent of all 100 Senators is necessary to begin any articles of impeachment during those sessions.”
The document notes that during the Senate recess, the Senate “was able to receive the announcement from the House that the President had been impeached,” but the Senate secretary would not notify the Senate of the announcement until the next scheduled regular session, which would be Jan. 19.
The McConnell memo’s impeachment rules say that once the trial begins, unless the Senate orders otherwise, the Senate “will continue in regular session (except Sundays) …… until a final judgment is rendered.”
These messages come at a time when President Trump is almost completely off the Internet platform. After Facebook banned President Trump, on the evening of January 8, Twitter also permanently banned President Trump from using the platform.
Tweets from the official @POTUS Twitter account have been wiped out, tweets from the Trump campaign have been removed, and Twitter also blocked the Twitter handle of legendary radio host, Rush Limbaugh.
Rush Limbaugh is an American right-wing radio host and journalist, author, and free-will activist.
Now that nearly all Senate Republicans have abandoned President Trump except for Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Texas), it’s unclear whether a bill to impeach Trump will be stopped in the Senate as it has been in the past.
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