The Federal Impeachment Process: A Constitutional and Historical Analysis

Front Cover
University of Chicago Press, Jun 15, 2000 - History - 260 pages
Throughout President Clinton's impeachment proceedings, the contending sides agreed on very little. One exception was The Federal Impeachment Process—the most complete analysis of the constitutional and legal issues raised in every impeachment proceeding in American history.

In this edition, Michael Gerhardt draws on his experience as a commentator and expert witness to examine the likely political and constitutional consequences of President Clinton's impeachment and trial. Placing the President's acquittal in historical perspective, he argues that it fits easily within the impeachment process as it has evolved over the past two centuries. Impeachment, he shows, is an inherently political process designed to expose and remedy political crimes. Subject neither to judicial review nor to presidential veto, it is a unique congressional power that involves both political and constitutional considerations, including the gravity of the offense charged, the harm to the constitutional order, and the link between an official's misconduct and duties.

Significantly updated, this book will be the standard work on the federal impeachment process for years to come.

On the first edition:

"The most comprehensive, analytic study of the federal impeachment process to date."—Choice

"This book is by some margin the most successful . . . analysis of impeachment issues to have been written, and it will be the standard work for years to come."—Constitutional Commentary
 

Contents

III
1
IV
3
V
12
VI
23
VIII
25
X
33
XI
47
XIII
64
XIX
118
XX
147
XXI
149
XXII
159
XXIV
173
XXVI
175
XXVII
192
XXVIII
195

XIV
73
XV
75
XVI
82
XVII
103
XVIII
112
XXIX
239
XXX
251
XXXI
255
Copyright

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About the author (2000)

Michael J. Gerhardt is the Samuel Ashe Distinguished Professor of Constitutional Law at the University of North Carolina School of Law in Chapel Hill.