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The direct answer is "no." "No, Clinton's impeachment was not unconstitutional." That's the short answer. The long answer is in the "why" it's not unconstitutional. Shall I start?
First, an impeachment proceeding of a sitting president starts and stops in congress, period. By that I mean (and the constitution means) that nobody else can tell congress what to do or how to do it. No other branch of government has the constitutional power/authority to tell congress what and how to *do* impeachments. No court-of-law (Judicial Branch) can take an impeachment case and decide that congress (Legislative Branch) was wrong or right. Well? What does THAT tell you?
It tell us that the constitution states that only congress can impeach . . . and upon "high crimes and misdemeanors."
Second, who interprets/defines "high crimes and misdemeanors?" Only congress does. Again, no court-of-law (including the U.S. Supreme Court) can order congress to do or not do whatever about "high crimes and misdemeanors." Again, impeachment proceedings begin and end in congress (Legislative Branch), never in a court-of-law (Judicial Branch).
Are you still w/ me here?
Third, this is why the rightwingnuts in congress impeached Clinton. Because they knew they could. Because they knew they could do so and do so about anything or nothing then call it as "high crimes or misdemeanors!" And they almost got away w/ it too. Clinton was almost "convicted" by the Senate for the House's findings of "impeachment."
Finally, backlash is a deterrent to impeachment. And, one of the many backlashes that the rightwingnuts may face down the road is that they set a very low bar to impeachment in the U.S. House.
It's a precedent setting low bar to impeachment and it may come back to bite them (the rightwingnuts) in the ass. I doubt it but it remains a possibility. That low bar of impeachment is set on subjective "morality" issues in a president's personal life -- after all Clinton's so-called impeachment had nothing to do w/ his work as president, his duty as president. Instead, it dealt solely on his personal life. How stupid can the rightwingnuts get?
As a matter of law, the U.S. Supreme Court should never have ruled that Clinton v. Jones (a law suit about Clinton's personal life), would not interfere w/ his duties as president. It was a 9-0 decision too. But that's another issue, other than you asked.
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