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MAJ Ken Landgren
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We have a GOP swamp. It relies on pragmatism as principles of ethics and morality do not fit their narrative.
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Was Trump impeached for breaking funding laws? - False: The impeachment of Donald Trump, the 45th president of the United States, was initiated on December 18, 2019, when the House of Representatives approved articles of impeachment on charges of abuse of power and obstruction of Congress. Trump was later acquitted by the Senate on these two counts of impeachment on February 5, 2020.

Did Trump illegally take veterans funds for personal use? - False: https://www.factcheck.org/2019/11/posts-falsely-claim-trump-stole-from-vets/

Did Trump illegally use DoD funds for the wall? - Unknown: The wheels of suit and appeals is still turning on this. If you read through the policies for Executive Budgets the amounts are within the governing guidelines for the various Federal Agencies to move between agencies - without Congressional approval. It has been found illegal, that ruling turned over, found illegal again, and still working up the chain of courts.

Shall we keep dancing?
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MAJ Ken Landgren
MAJ Ken Landgren
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SSgt (Join to see) -

- He was impeached because of his abuse of power in regards to appropriated funds.
- The Fact Check article clearly states he was found guilty of illegally using charity funds. You are like the 10th Trumper who cites an article that states he illegally used funds.
- A federal court found Trumps action to use DoD was illegal. Only Congress can change the color of money.

I am done debating with you. I am spinning my wheels.
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MAJ Ken Landgren - The impeachment of Donald Trump, the 45th president of the United States, was initiated on December 18, 2019, when the House of Representatives approved articles of impeachment on charges of abuse of power and obstruction of Congress. Trump was later acquitted by the Senate on these two counts of impeachment on February 5, 2020.[2]

Trump's impeachment came after a formal House inquiry alleged that he had solicited foreign interference in the 2020 U.S. presidential election to help his re-election bid, and then obstructed the inquiry itself by telling his administration officials to ignore subpoenas for documents and testimony. The inquiry reported that Trump withheld military aid[a] and an invitation to the White House to Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky in order to influence Ukraine to announce an investigation into one of Trump's political opponents, Joe Biden, and to promote a discredited conspiracy theory that Ukraine, not Russia, was behind interference in the 2016 presidential election.

The inquiry stage of Trump's impeachment lasted from September to November 2019, in the wake of an August 2019 whistleblower complaint alleging Trump's abuse of power. In October, three congressional committees (Intelligence, Oversight, and Foreign Affairs) deposed witnesses. In November, the House Intelligence Committee held a number of public hearings in which witnesses testified publicly; on December 3, the committee voted 13–9 along party lines to adopt a final report. A set of impeachment hearings before the House Judiciary Committee began on December 4; on December 13, it voted 23–17 along party lines to recommend two articles of impeachment, for abuse of power and obstruction of Congress. The committee released a lengthy report on the impeachment articles on December 16. Two days later, the full House approved both articles in a mostly party-line vote, with all Republicans opposing along with three Democrats. This made Trump the third U.S. president in history to be impeached and marked the first fully partisan impeachment where a U.S. president was impeached without support from the President's own party (though independent representative Justin Amash, who voted in favor of impeachment on both articles, had previously been a Republican until July 2019).

The articles were submitted to the Senate on January 16, 2020, initiating the trial. The trial saw no witnesses or documents being subpoenaed, as Republican senators rejected attempts to introduce subpoenas on January 21 while arranging for trial procedures, and then on January 31 after a debate. On February 5, Trump was acquitted on both counts by the Senate as neither count received 67 votes to convict. On Article I, abuse of power, 48 senators voted for conviction, while 52 senators voted for acquittal. On Article II, obstruction of Congress, 47 senators voted for conviction, while 53 senators voted to acquit. Republican Mitt Romney, the only senator to break party lines, became the first U.S. senator to vote to convict a president of his own party in an impeachment trial, as he voted for conviction on abuse of power.[4]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Impeachment_of_Donald_Trump#:~:text=The%20impeachment%20of%20Donald%20Trump,power%20and%20obstruction%20of%20Congress.&text=The%20committee%20released%20a%20lengthy,impeachment%20articles%20on%20December%2016.

Nowhere in there is any mention of funds, misappropriated or not. Can you point me to where that is in either charge brought before the Senate?
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For all its DIM-witted people, it still represents the capitol of the greatest collection of states that represent the greatest collection of opportunities, anywhere on Earth.
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