President Donald Trump should be impeached and removed from office
The debate is finished. The distribution of the voting points and the winner are presented below.
After 1 vote and with 6 points ahead, the winner is...
- Publication date
- Last updated date
- Type
- Standard
- Number of rounds
- 4
- Time for argument
- One week
- Max argument characters
- 10,100
- Voting period
- Two weeks
- Point system
- Multiple criterions
- Voting system
- Open
Definitions:
Donald Trump - Donald John Trump (born June 14, 1946) is the 45th and current president of the United States. Before entering politics, he was a businessman and television personality. (Wikipedia)
United States Constitution - The Constitution of the United States is the supreme law of the United States of America. The Constitution, originally comprising seven articles, delineates the national frame of government. (Wikipedia)
Impeachment - a charge of misconduct made against the holder of a public office. (Merriam-Webster)
Removed from office - The position of President of the United States becomes vacant and Vice President Mike Pence would take the Oath of Office.
Rules:
No new points in R4.
BOP on Pro (Innocent until proven guilty)
Forfeit = instant loss
it's important to note that there was no crime in the first place. Under the American legal system, it is next to impossible to obstruct an investigation into a crime that doesn't exist.
The long-awaited Mueller report found insufficient evidence to prosecute the president.
- "The Campaign's response to reports about Russian support for Trump."
- "Conduct involving FBI Director Comey and Michael Flynn."
- "The President's reaction to the continuing Russia investigation."
- "The President's termination of Comey."
- "The appointment of a Special Counsel and efforts to remove him."
- "Efforts to curtail the Special Counsel's investigation."
- "Efforts to prevent public disclosure of evidence."
- "Further efforts to have the Attorney General take control of the investigation."
- "Efforts to have McGahn deny that the President had ordered him to have the Special Counsel removed."
- "Conduct towards Flynn, Manafort, [REDACTED]."
- "Conduct involving Michael Cohen."
- An individual has corrupt intent.
- They engaged in obstructive conduct.
- That conduct was connected to a "pending or contemplated proceeding."
Merely asking someone to stop investigating is not obstruction.
. This means if President Trump fired James Comey for something else and that tangentially had the effect of slowing down or impeding the investigation unless you can prove that this was the President's intent, you can't press obstruction charges.
the investigation continued in spite of the president
He could have fired Robert Mueller whenever he wanted and have someone else appointed. but he didn't.
Cohen did say that the president seemed to imply that he should lie with his "facial expressions" but there is no precedent for bringing someone up on suborning perjury charges based on facial expressions.
the payment to Stormy Daniels was not actually a campaign expenditure.
it isn't his job to know campaign finance law.
the President paid off Stormy Daniels in order to influence the election
he knew that he was committing a finance violation when he committed the alleged action
fails to meet the burden of proof necessitated by American Jurisprudence. For that reason, as Impeachment is a legal matter,
Mueller abdicated his job as special counsel
In regard to the OLC (office of legal counsel) opinion that a sitting president cannot be indicted, you would need to show a place wherein Robert Mueller said that he would have recommended indictment if Trump weren't president. Which would be hard considering he said the opposite.
punted the decision on obstruction to the Attorney General and Deputy Attorney General (with the Deputy attorney general being no friend to Trump) and they concluded that the evidence would be insufficient to prosecute even in the absence of the OLC opinion.
grossly misrepresented the Ohio v. Maughan case
Moreover, he fails to establish the most critical part of an obstruction charge, one that he himself identified, Which is Corrupt intent.
Unless that original statement said "I'm firing James Comey to obstruct the Russia investigation"
keyword there being "instructions"
The president did not tell Michael Cohen to go along with his story about business dealings in Russia.
You're technically allowed to go after the president on a lower standard of proof,
total failure to prove corrupt intent
“Special counsel Mueller stated three times to us in that meeting in response to our questioning that he emphatically was not saying that but for the OLC [Office of Legal Counsel] opinion, he would have found obstruction,” Barr told the Senate Judiciary Committee. “He said that in the future, the facts of the case against a president might be such that a special counsel would recommend abandoning the OLC opinion, but this is not such a case.” -Attorney General of the United States testifying before Congress.
The Justice Department announcement appeared not quite 24 hours after the explosive story from Thursday night. Although it didn't go into detail, the response suggested the story didn't correctly reflect the special counsel's dealings with Trump's ex-fixer.
"BuzzFeed's description of specific statements to the special counsel's office, and characterization of documents and testimony obtained by this office, regarding Michael Cohen's congressional testimony are not accurate," said spokesman Peter Carr."
mueller did abdicate his duty. You said it yourself, his job was to determine whether or not the president should be indicted. He didn't do that. He made no determination and left that up to the AG and deputy AG
“Special counsel Mueller stated three times to us in that meeting in response to our questioning that he emphatically was not saying that but for the OLC [Office of Legal Counsel] opinion, he would have found obstruction,”
You did misrepresent the Ohio v. Maughan case.
Furthermore, the Supreme Court is quite exacting on the application of this law
Mueller himself said about the OLC opinion
his obstruction point has already been refuted,
in regard to the firing of James Comey, that at the time of Comey's firing the president didn't even think that he was under investigation. Comey was fired because he was telling Trump that he wasn't under investigation but then Comey wouldn't say that in public. (because it was a lie.) Trump then fired Comey for doing that
if the president really wanted to stop the investigation into Michael Flynn, then he would just pardon Flynn and stop the investigation in its tracks. That would be a constitutional action. See Gerald Ford pardoning Richard Nixon and not getting impeached. There would be no legal precedent for him being impeached for pardoning Flynn. But he didn't do it.
if the president really wanted to stop the investigation into Michael Flynn, then he would just pardon Flynn and stop the investigation in its tracks. That would be a constitutional action. See Gerald Ford pardoning Richard Nixon and not getting impeached. There would be no legal precedent for him being impeached for pardoning Flynn. But he didn't do it.
There were a number of ways to stop the investigation in its tracks constitutionally. But none of them were taken.
that article was debunked by Mueller himself. [...] whoops. This is why you don't cite Buzzfeed.
however, this is incompatible with Barr's view on the role of the Special Counsel. This shows that these are untested waters constitutionally speaking and therefore cannot be seen as accurate nor proof of anything in this case.
This means that some FBI agents disagreed with Muller's office - meaning this is still open to interpretation.
Reason For Decision:
https://web.archive.org/web/20191026063436/https://docs.google.com/document/d/1KH8aLtYjkA6NqmtadVzCJGbHOOpC_wMk8rohKLa5kBg/edit
I'm very busy. I have a lot of studying to do. I don't have time for challenges at the moment.
You really think that democrats' end goal is to take over America? That they have a more authoritarian trend than the republicans? That's absurd. I hope these views didn't have any effect on your vote for this debate.
Also I find it hilarious that you stopped posting when you were challenged.
I'm happy to have this as a formal debate if you want.
"the damage they can cause" is precisely why some law-abiding citizens would want to own a gun in the first place.
If you're hunting buffalo, you're gonna want something that can deal damage to your target so that you can kill it quickly and efficiently, and have something to cook and eat.
If you're defending yourself from a criminal that wants to harm you, you're gonna want something that can quickly deal enough damage to the criminal so that he/she can no longer harming you.
If you're fighting against an oppressive government, you're gonna want something that can deal damage to them so that they can't oppress you that easily.
Also, Sir_Pigeon is correct.
According to the CDC there are 300,000 uses of offensive gun use in the US, while guns are used by citizens 500,000 to over 3 million times defensively. The police can't be everywhere at once, their average response time is around 10 minutes. Even though the argument is lost by the liberals on self defense alone, that's not even the reason the 2nd amendment was created, it's purpose is to prevent government tyranny. I don't think tyranny is possible today or tomorrow but 50 to 100 years from now it could absolutely be a problem.
Also if someone invades your house, the first thing your going to do...
is call someone with a gun.
I have many arguments against number 2 and 3.
Number 1 is just not worth having them for due to the damage they can cause.
We need the second amendment for:
number 1: hunting
number 2: self-defense
number 3: fighting back against the government if they ever become tyrannical
I'd be happy to debate your point on guns as I believe in the US, the 2nd Amendment should be abolished with heavy and general restrictions but on guns - including forcibly taking them from people who don't hand them in.
You two should at least vote on this, since you both seem to be very passionate about this issue.
The Democrats' ultimate end goal is to take over America and achieve absolute power over this country and everyone in it. The only reason they have not yet succeeded is because our country has several lines of defense that stand between the Democrats and absolute power, and President Donald Trump is one of those lines.
First, they want to let as many immigrants, both legal and illegal, into this country as they can so they can give those immigrants voting power, which will make them all vote Democrat and ensure that Democrats win every future election. President Donald Trump has been combatting this since he was elected into office in 2016-2017.
Next they want to restrict free speech as much as they can and only allow speech that agrees with their point of view. We're already seeing this kind of thing happen with people getting attacked/harassed over wearing Maga Hats, as well as certain phrases being banned from college campuses.
Then they want to bribe people with stuff like "free college" "free healthcare" and all sorts of other (not) free stuff, so that more people vote for them, but they will use our tax dollars to pay for all of it, and tax the wealthy unfairly.
Finally, they want to restrict our access to guns as much as possible, since the second amendment is our last line of defense against them. Without guns, we are vulnerable to both criminals and oppressive governments. Nations like Venezuela, China, and North Korea all disarm their citizens so that their governments can oppress them freely without them being able to fight back. We can't end up like them, but the Democrats know they can't ban guns outright, so they do the next best thing, which is to restrict them as much as they can by passing hundreds of worthless "common sense gun regulations" that do not stop criminals, and only make it harder for law-abiding citizens to defend themselves.
Thanks.
Ramshutu keeps deleting my RFDs/votes everytime they aren't "thorough enough" so I had to make sure I explain things in much greater detail so that it meets the site's requirements.
I glanced at your RFD and must say that from what I've read, that is one of the most thorough RFDs that I think I have seen on the site.
Consistent headings would have been very useful in following each major point. Generally I advice major headings bolded and underlined, and subheadings just underlined (that way when someone is reading the debate, they know when say the Perjury section begins and ends, so they can follow it between rounds to see how it begins and ends):
tiny.cc/DebateArt
Any tips would be appreciated!
Just skimmed this, and while the formatting could do with some improvement, good job all around.
No, I don't do many debates anymore. Just wanted to give my opinion.
I'm more than happy to have this debate with you, if you want to prove your argument.
lol MAGA
I'd say there would have been at least 30,000 reasons to impeach the other choice.
#MAGA
No, you socialists should. We all know this impeachment stuff is bs and has been fake from the very beginning.
You should probably reevaluate your beliefs then. The Pro here made a case based on US law and you spouted that TDS nonsense at him anyway.
I agree it is not an argument. I don't believe it is legitimate criticism. Or maybe people are just uniformed because of the media that portrays things a certain way.
Spamming TDS is not a defense or argument against legitimate criticism.
Though it may be a mild form, since you are socialist and naturally do not like conservatives getting elected, you have TDS. If you support the rule of law then you should investigate the Democrats for starting a fake witch hunt to undermine the presidency. Since they can't win themselves they resort to other things that they 100% know are cheap and un-american.
Then I must protest. I do not have "TDS". I'm not even American - it barley affects me. I just support - unequivocally - the Rule of Law.
Both.
Is that comment aimed at me or someone else?
Sad case of Trump Derangement Syndrome. Just can't get over the fact he is President.
Nice rebuttals, my dude.
No accusation with no evidence is credible. especially not in the legal system. Also, it's a little weird to just show up lob an accusation, start a media frenzy, then jump ship before you have to answer any questions. Also, this claim contradicts the testimony of other women who say that President Trump banned Jeffrey Epstein from his properties after he was inappropriate with an underage girl.
the accusations were credible and so were the death threats from the trump machine A copy of the California lawsuit (filed on 26 April 2016) shared via the Scribd web site outlined the allegations, which included the accusation that Trump and Epstein had (over 20 years earlier) “sexually and physically” abused the then 13-year-old plaintiff and forced her “to engage in various perverted and depraved sex acts” — including being “forced to manually stimulate Defendant Trump with the use of her hand upon Defendant Trump’s erect penis until he reached sexual orgasm,” and being “forced to engage in an unnatural lesbian sex act with her fellow minor and sex slave, Maria Doe, age 12, for the sexual enjoyment of Defendant Trump” — after luring her to a “series of underage sex parties” by promising her “money and a modeling career”:https://www.snopes.com/news/2016/06/23/donald-trump-rape-lawsuit/ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jpstc9r_esA
That's a lot of nonsense. First off, the accuser of the 13 year old rape allegation not only provided no evidence to back up her claim, But also dismissed her lawsuit before it could be investigated. It was a lie.
If you did Policy debate in school, then you know just as well as I do that the absence of evidence is not evidence. You have no idea what President Trump pays in taxes because no one has seen his tax returns.
hes crazy enough to be ruled unfit he is a tax cheat a traitor he raped a 13 year old girl, the list goes on forever for got sake he raped a 13 year old girl how can you defend that?
Yes, But the president shouldn't be impeached if there are no legal grounds for the impeachment. Which is what my argument is all about.
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Thanks! It's only my 2nd full debate.
Great argument by the way.
Something being founded by something doesn't make it good. For instance:
Slavery isn't good because America was founded upon it.
I think I'll pass on the debate. Don't want to accept too much.
We could have a debate on this, if you want.
What's wrong with being a Christian and a socialist. The UK Labour Party was founded on the principles of the New Testament and is a democratic socialist party.
Christian socialist??????????
Just rare and bad. Christianity can flipendo away and socialism can be tried by another country only for it to fail again given it has been demonstrated the government is not best at running markets.