George W. Bush/impeachment

Overview
During his term in office, George W. Bush committed what some people believe are impeachable offenses. There have been several popular movements to start impeachment proceedings, but Congress had generally ignored them until Dennis Kucinich formally submitted 35 articles of impeachment in 2008.

Related Pages

 * Bush's elevation of presidential power
 * corruption in the Bush administration
 * User:Woozle/2008-06-11 email for impeachment

The List

 * (beingism: illegal war) declaring war without authorization, misleading Congress, lying to the American public (arguably "under oath")
 * (beingism: illegal torture) conspiring to commit the torture of prisoners in violation of the "Federal Torture Act" Title 18 United States Code, Section 113C, the UN Torture Convention and the Geneva Conventions, which under Article VI of the Constitution are part of the "supreme Law of the Land" (see also: torture during GWB administration)
 * (beingism: illegal detention) acting to strip Americans of their constitutional rights by ordering indefinite detention of citizens, without access to legal counsel, without charge and without opportunity to appear before a civil judicial officer to challenge the detention, based solely on the discretionary designation by the President of a U.S. citizen as an "enemy combatant", all in subversion of law

Reference

 * Sourcewatch: Efforts to initiate the impeachment of President George W. Bush
 * beingism: Charges and Evidence: Impeachment of George W. Bush
 * illegal war
 * illegal torture and breaking of Geneva Conventions
 * detention
 * OhMyNews: Bush's Impeachable Offenses:
 * Part 1 illegal war
 * Part 2: illegal spying
 * Part 3: leaking of classified secrets to further a political agenda (the Plame affair)
 * Part 4: multiple violations of the Geneva convention and U.S. Military Code
 * Part 5: illegal use of signing statements

Editorials

 * 2007-07-26 War Crimes and the White House: "The Dishonor in a Tortured New 'Interpretation' of the Geneva Conventions" by P.X. Kelley and Robert F. Turner, authors with impeccable conservative credentials