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  • Bush Impeachment Articles Sent To Judiciary Committee

    BUSH IMPEACHMENT ARTICLES SENT TO JUDICIARY COMMITTEE
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    PanARMENIAN.Net
    12.06.2008

    The U.S. House of Representatives has voted to send articles of
    impeachment against President George W. Bush to a committee that is
    not likely to hold hearings before the end of his term.

    By 251-166, House members dispatched the measure to the Judiciary
    Committee on Wednesday - a procedure often used to kill legislation.

    House Speaker Nancy Pelosi long ago declared the prospects for
    impeachment proceedings "off the table."

    Rep. Dennis Kucinich, D-Ohio, who ran for president earlier this year,
    insists that his resolution deserves more consideration. He spent more
    than four hours Monday night reading his 35 articles of impeachment
    into the record, including charges that Bush manufactured a false
    case for going to war against Iraq.

    House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer said Tuesday that the Democratic-led
    Congress was holding the Bush administration accountable and
    questioned spending time on impeachment in the "waning months of this
    administration's tenure."

    An election looms in which every House seat, a third of those in
    the Senate and the presidency are up for grabs. House leaders are
    staunchly against spending the remaining time in the abbreviated
    legislative schedule on impeachment proceedings.

    The House vote sent the impeachment articles to the House Judiciary
    Committee, chaired by Rep. John Conyers, D-Mich., who had once vowed
    to hold impeachment hearings. He wouldn't immediately comment on the
    articles' prospects for hearings.

    Democratic aides widely suggested those gauging the bills prospects
    look to a precedent: the impeachment articles against Vice President
    Dick Cheney, which were sent to Conyers' committee in November. There's
    no evidence they will be considered before the Bush administration
    leaves office in January.

    Those were Kucinich's, too. Republicans, seeing a chance to
    force Democrats into an embarrassing debate, voted to bring up the
    resolution. Democrats countered by pushing through a motion to scuttle
    the bill from the floor.

    Kucinich's articles also charge Bush with failing to provide troops
    with vehicle armor, illegally detaining both foreign nationals and
    Americans, condoning torture, mishandling the government's response
    to Hurricane Katrina and undermining efforts to address global warning.

    "It is imperative that members of Congress have a thorough opportunity
    to read the articles of impeachment and study the documentation,"
    Kucinich said in a statement, the AP reports.
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