NFL
U.S. Senators have taken the STUNNING step of officially calling for President Trump’s removal from office under the 25th Amendment…
🇺🇸 U.S. Lawmakers Renew Calls for President Trump’s Removal Under the 25th Amendment
In recent weeks, several U.S. lawmakers — including at least one U.S. Senator — have publicly called for President Donald Trump to be removed from office under the 25th Amendment, a rarely used constitutional provision designed to address presidential incapacity. These calls have reignited a broader debate about presidential fitness and executive power amid controversial actions and statements by the president.
📌 What’s Happening Now
The renewed push for removal stems from concern among some Democrats and a small number of Republican critics about what they view as erratic or dangerous behavior by President Trump, particularly surrounding his public remarks about trying to acquire the island of Greenland and related diplomatic tensions. Lawmakers including Sen. Ed Markey (D-Massachusetts) have explicitly called for the 25th Amendment to be invoked. Representative Yassamin Ansari of Arizona has also referred to the president as “mentally ill” and urged immediate action. �
These lawmakers argue that the amendment exists precisely for situations where a president may no longer be able to responsibly fulfill the duties of the office. While some descriptions of the president’s behavior have been sharply critical, supporters of the amendment move stress that the Constitution provides mechanisms for addressing such concerns without waiting for elections.
📜 What Is the 25th Amendment?
The 25th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution was ratified in 1967 after the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. Its primary purpose is to ensure continuity of government by outlining how presidential succession works and how a president can be removed if they are unable to discharge the powers and duties of the office. �
The amendment has several sections:
Section 1 deals with succession if the president dies or resigns.
Section 2 allows the vice president to become president if that office becomes vacant.
Section 3 permits the president to temporarily transfer power to the vice president (for example, during surgery).
Section 4, the provision at the heart of the current debate, allows the vice president and a majority of the Cabinet to declare the president unfit to serve. If that happens, the vice president becomes acting president. �
Importantly, Section 4 has never been formally invoked in U.S. history. In practice, removing a sitting president through this route would be extremely challenging because it requires a majority of the Cabinet and the vice president to agree — a high constitutional threshold. �
📊 Why This Matters
The calls for invoking the 25th Amendment reflect broader political tensions in Washington. Some lawmakers see this as a constitutional safeguard against what they describe as dangerous or unpredictable exercise of presidential power. Others, including many Republicans and constitutional scholars, argue that the amendment was never intended to be used as a political tool and that attempting to remove a president under it without clear evidence of incapacity could set a troubling precedent. �
Bloomberg.com
Beyond the amendment debate, Congress itself has other powers — impeachment and conviction, for example — that remain part of the constitutional toolkit for addressing misconduct by a president. Throughout Trump’s political career, both impeachment and calls for 25th Amendment action have surfaced in different contexts, including after the Capitol attack in January 2021. �
🧠 What Would Happen Next
If the 25th Amendment route were seriously pursued today:
The vice president and a majority of the Cabinet would have to agree that Trump is unable to fulfill his duties.
They would send a written declaration to Congress and the vice president would become acting president.
If the president then contests the decision, Congress would decide by a two-thirds vote in both the House and Senate whether the president should be permanently removed.
Given these high requirements, most analysts view the amendment as a remote possibility in practice — though the fact that lawmakers are discussing it publicly signals deep political divides.