During President William Clinton\u27s impeachment trial, Chief Justice William Rehnquist denied a request to open the deliberations to the public, relying on Senate tradition and ambiguous rules of procedure. This article examines the current Senate impeachment rules in the context of an historical tradition of Senate secrecy, and argues for rule changes to create a clear rule of openness at all stages of an impeachment trial, including deliberations. Professor Cohn argues the rules adopted in the 19th century need to be modified to conform to 21st century America. Differences discussed include popularly elected senators, increased accountability of government stemming largely from the Watergate affair and the advent of television and First...
© 2020 Lifescience Global. All rights reserved. The role and importance of the president is growing ...
Partisan impeachment-in which one branch of government attacks anotherhas played a central role in t...
Senate confirmation hearings for Supreme Court nominees have in recent years grown increasingly cont...
During President William Clinton\u27s impeachment trial, Chief Justice William Rehnquist denied a re...
In this Article, Professor Turley addresses the use of impeachment, specifically the Senate trial, a...
President Clinton was the first President to be impeached since Andrew Johnson in 1868. The impeachm...
In a criminal justice system where guilty pleas are the norm and trials the rare exception, the issu...
In 1999, for only the second time in United States history, the Senate conducted an impeachment tria...
Much of the recent legal scholarship on the Senate expresses concern about gridlock, which was cause...
Turn the clock back for a moment to August 1973. In the midst of the burgeoning Watergate scandal, t...
News release announces a media advisory that a number of University of Dayton faculty members are av...
The exclusionary evidence rules derived from the Fourth, Fifth, and Sixth Amendments continue to pla...
This Note explores the traditional interpretation of the Constitution\u27s impeachment provisions in...
In recent years, commentators have complained about what they regard as an increasingly dysfunction...
The Framers of the Constitution struggled to balance the independence of the federal judiciary with ...
© 2020 Lifescience Global. All rights reserved. The role and importance of the president is growing ...
Partisan impeachment-in which one branch of government attacks anotherhas played a central role in t...
Senate confirmation hearings for Supreme Court nominees have in recent years grown increasingly cont...
During President William Clinton\u27s impeachment trial, Chief Justice William Rehnquist denied a re...
In this Article, Professor Turley addresses the use of impeachment, specifically the Senate trial, a...
President Clinton was the first President to be impeached since Andrew Johnson in 1868. The impeachm...
In a criminal justice system where guilty pleas are the norm and trials the rare exception, the issu...
In 1999, for only the second time in United States history, the Senate conducted an impeachment tria...
Much of the recent legal scholarship on the Senate expresses concern about gridlock, which was cause...
Turn the clock back for a moment to August 1973. In the midst of the burgeoning Watergate scandal, t...
News release announces a media advisory that a number of University of Dayton faculty members are av...
The exclusionary evidence rules derived from the Fourth, Fifth, and Sixth Amendments continue to pla...
This Note explores the traditional interpretation of the Constitution\u27s impeachment provisions in...
In recent years, commentators have complained about what they regard as an increasingly dysfunction...
The Framers of the Constitution struggled to balance the independence of the federal judiciary with ...
© 2020 Lifescience Global. All rights reserved. The role and importance of the president is growing ...
Partisan impeachment-in which one branch of government attacks anotherhas played a central role in t...
Senate confirmation hearings for Supreme Court nominees have in recent years grown increasingly cont...