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PostJan 12, 2021#1151

STL_4_LIFE wrote:
DTGstl314 wrote:So... it's gonna happen. Tomorrow, Donald Trump will become the first president in our nation's 240+ year history to ever have been impeached twice.

He'll also be the first president to ever be impeached during the transition period after having lost an election. I don't expect the senate trial to commence until after Biden is sworn in, will be interesting to see how that goes. Odds are still pretty strong that he gets acquitted, but only because the threshold for conviction is so insanely high - it's hard to see 17 Republican senators having the spines to defy the wishes of MAGA nation. I do think we'll see more than one GOP senator vote for conviction this time, and probably at least 3 or 4.
LMFAO...they are wasting their time.

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Impeaching and convicting Trump will have meaningful consequences, ranging from removal of office (if soon) to denial of future ability to run for Federal office.

Momentum seems to be growing among some GOP members to impeach...so it doesn't seem like they're wasting their time.

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PostJan 12, 2021#1152

brianadler6545 wrote:
STL_4_LIFE wrote:
DTGstl314 wrote:So... it's gonna happen. Tomorrow, Donald Trump will become the first president in our nation's 240+ year history to ever have been impeached twice.

He'll also be the first president to ever be impeached during the transition period after having lost an election. I don't expect the senate trial to commence until after Biden is sworn in, will be interesting to see how that goes. Odds are still pretty strong that he gets acquitted, but only because the threshold for conviction is so insanely high - it's hard to see 17 Republican senators having the spines to defy the wishes of MAGA nation. I do think we'll see more than one GOP senator vote for conviction this time, and probably at least 3 or 4.
LMFAO...they are wasting their time.

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Impeaching and convicting Trump will have meaningful consequences, ranging from removal of office (if soon) to denial of future ability to run for Federal office.

Momentum seems to be growing among some GOP members to impeach...so it doesn't seem like they're wasting their time.

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We'll see..

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PostJan 13, 2021#1153

STL_4_LIFE wrote:
Jan 12, 2021
dbInSouthCity wrote:You’ll see about 20-30 Republicans vote to impeach.    It’s going to put a sizzling hot potato in the heads of all the 2022 GOP senators, especially the ones in blue/purple states
Yep. And their careers will will effectively over. They don't give a sh*t though. 🙄🙄🙄🙄

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Cool story, bro.

PostJan 13, 2021#1154

dbInSouthCity wrote:
Jan 12, 2021
You’ll see about 20-30 Republicans vote to impeach.    It’s going to put a sizzling hot potato in the heads of all the 2022 GOP senators, especially the ones in blue/purple states
Richard Shelby (AL) - acquit (he may be retiring anyway - he'll be 87 next year and he's been in the Senate since 1986)
Lisa Murkowski (AK) - convict
John Boozman (AR) - acquit
Marco Rubio (FL) - acquit (he'll get primaried from the right if he doesn't, and he'll lose that primary)
Mike Crapo (ID) - acquit
Todd Young (IN) - acquit
Chuck Grassley (IA) - ??? (he's probably retiring, since he'll also be 88 next year)
Jerry Moran (KS) - acquit
Rand Paul (KY) - acquit
John Kennedy (LA) - acquit
Roy Blunt (MO) - acquit (he's already come out against the impeachment)
Richard Burr (NC) - convict (he's retiring, and Trump has f*cked him over)
John Hoeven (ND) - acquit
Rob Portman (OH) - ??? (he'd be risking a primary challenge, but he seems to be genuinely bothered by all of this)
James Lankfrod (OK) - acquit
Pat Toomey (PA) - convict (he's retiring, and he's already said he considers Trump's offenses impeachable)
Tim Scott (SC) - ??? (if he votes to convict, he'll definitely get primaried out of his job, but he's a black man who seems geuinely disturned by what has happened)
John Thune (SD) - convict (he's been one of the more critical voices from the GOP)
Mike Lee (UT) - acquit
Ron Johnson (WI) - acquit (he may be retiring, but he's a toady through and through)

I count 4 likely votes to convict, 3 tossups, and 13 votes to acquit.

I'm almost more curious about  the 30 GOP senators who will have at least 4 years of breathing room before they face the electorate again. I think Romney and Collins will both vote to convict, hard to say who else might. The 4 freshman GOP senators who just got elected will all vote to acquit, because each one of them is total bootlicker. The 16 other Class II Republican senators who don't have to worry about the voters until 2026 will be largely free to vote their consciences - it's hard to imagine how their vote on this thing will have much bearing on their electoral hopes six years from now, which is a lifetime away in political terms.

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PostJan 13, 2021#1155

GOP Rep. Lauren Boebert who has publicly claimed she wants to carry a firearm on to the House floor is currently in a standoff with Capitol Police as she won't let them see what's in her bag at the newly installed metal detectors outside the chamber. 

This is what we're dealing with here. 

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PostJan 13, 2021#1156

Baltimore Jack wrote:GOP Rep. Lauren Boebert who has publicly claimed she wants to carry a firearm on to the House floor is currently in a standoff with Capitol Police as she won't let them see what's in her bag at the newly installed metal detectors outside the chamber. 

This is what we're dealing with here. 
2nd Amendment.

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PostJan 13, 2021#1157

STL_4_LIFE wrote:
Baltimore Jack wrote:GOP Rep. Lauren Boebert who has publicly claimed she wants to carry a firearm on to the House floor is currently in a standoff with Capitol Police as she won't let them see what's in her bag at the newly installed metal detectors outside the chamber. 

This is what we're dealing with here. 
2nd Amendment.

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Seems we have a troll

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PostJan 13, 2021#1158

DTGstl314 wrote:
dbInSouthCity wrote:
Jan 12, 2021
You’ll see about 20-30 Republicans vote to impeach.    It’s going to put a sizzling hot potato in the heads of all the 2022 GOP senators, especially the ones in blue/purple states
Richard Shelby (AL) - acquit (he may be retiring anyway - he'll be 87 next year and he's been in the Senate since 1986)
Lisa Murkowski (AK) - convict
John Boozman (AR) - acquit
Marco Rubio (FL) - acquit (he'll get primaried from the right if he doesn't, and he'll lose that primary)
Mike Crapo (ID) - acquit
Todd Young (IN) - acquit
Chuck Grassley (IA) - ??? (he's probably retiring, since he'll also be 88 next year)
Jerry Moran (KS) - acquit
Rand Paul (KY) - acquit
John Kennedy (LA) - acquit
Roy Blunt (MO) - acquit (he's already come out against the impeachment)
Richard Burr (NC) - convict (he's retiring, and Trump has f*cked him over)
John Hoeven (ND) - acquit
Rob Portman (OH) - ??? (he'd be risking a primary challenge, but he seems to be genuinely bothered by all of this)
James Lankfrod (OK) - acquit
Pat Toomey (PA) - convict (he's retiring, and he's already said he considers Trump's offenses impeachable)
Tim Scott (SC) - ??? (if he votes to convict, he'll definitely get primaried out of his job, but he's a black man who seems geuinely disturned by what has happened)
John Thune (SD) - convict (he's been one of the more critical voices from the GOP)
Mike Lee (UT) - acquit
Ron Johnson (WI) - acquit (he may be retiring, but he's a toady through and through)

I count 4 likely votes to convict, 3 tossups, and 13 votes to acquit.

I'm almost more curious about  the 30 GOP senators who will have at least 4 years of breathing room before they face the electorate again. I think Romney and Collins will both vote to convict, hard to say who else might. The 4 freshman GOP senators who just got elected will all vote to acquit, because each one of them is total bootlicker. The 16 other Class II Republican senators who don't have to worry about the voters until 2026 will be largely free to vote their consciences - it's hard to imagine how their vote on this thing will have much bearing on their electoral hopes six years from now, which is a lifetime away in political terms.
Pelosi is a piece of sh*t. She needs to be in prison for trying to impeach Trump again. Russia...Russia...Russia didn't work so she set up the Capitol attack to blame it on him. #treason

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PostJan 13, 2021#1159

brianadler6545 wrote:
STL_4_LIFE wrote:
Baltimore Jack wrote:GOP Rep. Lauren Boebert who has publicly claimed she wants to carry a firearm on to the House floor is currently in a standoff with Capitol Police as she won't let them see what's in her bag at the newly installed metal detectors outside the chamber. 

This is what we're dealing with here. 
2nd Amendment.

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Seems we have a troll

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I'm not a troll. Are you happy about the communist government about to take over????

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sc4mayor
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PostJan 13, 2021#1160

^ You’re making a complete ass out of yourself.

You’re either on the side of the US and democracy or you’re on the side of Trump, sedition, insurrection, and treason. In other words, if you pick the latter, you’re a domestic terrorist.

Choose wisely.

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PostJan 13, 2021#1161

STL_4_LIFE wrote:
Jan 13, 2021
Baltimore Jack wrote:GOP Rep. Lauren Boebert who has publicly claimed she wants to carry a firearm on to the House floor is currently in a standoff with Capitol Police as she won't let them see what's in her bag at the newly installed metal detectors outside the chamber. 

This is what we're dealing with here. 
2nd Amendment.

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Has f*ckall to do with whether or not it is acceptable to be walking around packing on the floor of the U.S. House of Representatives.

PostJan 13, 2021#1162

Do we have an ignore function?

ETA: I just discovered we do. Problem solved.

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PostJan 13, 2021#1163

STL_4_LIFE wrote:
Jan 13, 2021
...so she set up the Capitol attack to blame it on him. #treason
it's soul-crushingly discouraging that there are people this dumb.

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PostJan 13, 2021#1164

STL_4_LIFE wrote:
Jan 13, 2021
Pelosi is a piece of sh*t. She needs to be in prison for trying to impeach Trump again. Russia...Russia...Russia didn't work so she set up the Capitol attack to blame it on him. #treason

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This is your only warning. One more and you'll be banned.

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PostJan 13, 2021#1165

sc4mayor wrote:^ You’re making a complete ass out of yourself.

You’re either on the side of the US and democracy or you’re on the side of Trump, sedition, insurrection, and treason. In other words, if you pick the latter, you’re a domestic terrorist.

Choose wisely.
Oh really? I'm a patriot and care about this country. China owns Sleepy Joe and you fools are too brainwashed to see it. How long do you think Joey is going to be in office before Pelosi and company use the 25th Amendment to REMOVE him and put in that worthless witch Harris? Calling me a domestic terrorist when you don't even know me really shows who you are.

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PostJan 13, 2021#1166

DTGstl314 wrote:Do we have an ignore function?

ETA: I just discovered we do. Problem solved.
LMFAO.

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PostJan 13, 2021#1167

Bye, bye

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PostJan 13, 2021#1168

Well that was fun.

Anyway, back on topic... Axios is reporting that McConnell appears to be more likely than not to vote for Trump's conviction in an impeachment trial. I'll believe it when I see it. But if that's actually true and he does, I think they may actually be able to get the 17 Republicans they would need for a conviction. I think he would break the dam wide open by giving his other GOP members permission to defy the orange demigod.

PostJan 13, 2021#1169

Fun fact: If a fair number of Republican senators want Trump to get convicted but don't want to have to be the ones to directly pull the trigger, there's a workaround... the Constitution doesn't require 2/3 of all senators to secure a conviction in an impeachment trial, it requires 2/3 of all senators present. In other words, if there are 8 Republicans who would be willing to vote guilty in the trial and then another group of Republicans who are fine with him being convicted but who don't want a direct hand in it for whatever reason, all they would need to do is to get 13 Republican senators to stay home. Then you have 58 votes for conviction in a body of 87 senators - which is exactly 2/3.

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PostJan 13, 2021#1170

dbInSouthCity wrote:
Jan 12, 2021
You’ll see about 20-30 Republicans vote to impeach.    It’s going to put a sizzling hot potato in the heads of all the 2022 GOP senators, especially the ones in blue/purple states
It'd be kind of amazing to watch Republicans rally around Trump so closely after experiencing the brutal electoral realities of doubling down on him - losing the White House, losing the Senate, and perhaps losing the state of Georgia. And all of those major setbacks were before Confederate flags were waving in the Capitol. 

Not a whole lot of GOP senators from blue/purple states in the 2022 though. NC and Penn are probably the closest, and their GOP incumbents are retiring. 

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PostJan 13, 2021#1171

wabash wrote:
Jan 13, 2021
dbInSouthCity wrote:
Jan 12, 2021
You’ll see about 20-30 Republicans vote to impeach.    It’s going to put a sizzling hot potato in the heads of all the 2022 GOP senators, especially the ones in blue/purple states
It'd be kind of amazing to watch Republicans rally around Trump so closely after experiencing the brutal electoral realities of doubling down on him - losing the White House, losing the Senate, and perhaps losing the state of Georgia. And all of those major setbacks were before Confederate flags were waving in the Capitol. 

Not a whole lot of GOP senators from blue/purple states in the 2022 though. NC and Penn are probably the closest, and their GOP incumbents are retiring. 
Wisconsin, Ohio, and Florida are all potentially in play as well. All three will be challenging, but far from insurmountable. I don't think Ron Johnson is especially popular right now. Portman will be tough because he's not too Trumpy, but a solid conservative nonetheless in a state that is getting redder. Rubio will be the toughest of the three, and while Democrats keep coming up just barely short in Florida - they keep coming up just barely short. It isn't a deep red state, it's a very purple state that has swung to the Republicans by 1-2 points in all of the most recent elections there. Point being, it's not Missouri.

Iowa might be in play as well, because it's hard to imagine Grassley running for an eighth term at the age of 89, but who knows, maybe he thinks he's the next Strom Thurmond. If Grassley does decide he wants to keep going until his mid-90s, he'll get re-elected fairly easily, because people are stupid.

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PostJan 13, 2021#1172

DTGstl314 wrote:
Jan 13, 2021
Iowa might be in play as well, because it's hard to imagine Grassley running for an eighth term at the age of 89, but who knows, maybe he thinks he's the next Strom Thurmond. If Grassley does decide he wants to keep going until his mid-90s, he'll get re-elected fairly easily, because people are stupid.
Bad news is, Grassley's grandson (Pretty sure it's his grandson, not son) is the Speaker of the IA House of Representatives - I can't imagine him not trying to run in '22 to keep a Grassley in the Senate since the Hoover Admin or whenever Chuck took office.

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PostJan 13, 2021#1173

DTGstl314 wrote:
Jan 13, 2021
Fun fact: If a fair number of Republican senators want Trump to get convicted but don't want to have to be the ones to directly pull the trigger, there's a workaround... the Constitution doesn't require 2/3 of all senators to secure a conviction in an impeachment trial, it requires 2/3 of all senators present. In other words, if there are 8 Republicans who would be willing to vote guilty in the trial and then another group of Republicans who are fine with him being convicted but who don't want a direct hand in it for whatever reason, all they would need to do is to get 13 Republican senators to stay home. Then you have 58 votes for conviction in a body of 87 senators - which is exactly 2/3.
This is what I'm expecting.  McConnell and many in the GOP would like to see Trump barred from running again in 2024. So if they can use the narrative of "this is going to be a divisive vote and we want to focus on unifying the country moving forward" and have some GOP senators stay home, it could be a win in their books.

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PostJan 13, 2021#1174

10 GOP voted to impeach- most ever for their own parties president.   Many more would have if they didn’t get murder threats from the MAGA Cult.   2 more dozen took the off ramp when censure option for presented


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PostJan 13, 2021#1175


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