Old Trump foe says he must be stopped before ‘tanks are rolling down the streets'
Removing President Donald Trump from office is an urgent matter for U.S. Rep. Al Green, D-Tex.
Green, 77, filed articles of impeachment against the 47th president last week, citing the Commander in Chief as a threat to democracy.
In an interview with Newsweek, Green said he felt the time was now to act on filing the articles, arguing things could get worse if he did so later.
'You don't wait until the tanks are rolling down the streets of American cities,' Green told Newsweek. 'It's too late then. You don't wait until you have what everybody will recognize as a constitutional crisis, because that can be the forerunner to tanks moving down the streets of American cities.'
During his interview, Green said Trump condones the undermining of the judiciary branch's independence, denigrates federal judges, disregards the separation of powers between branches, violates the due process clause and is 'condoning the flouting of orders of United States Federal Courts, including orders of the United States Supreme Court.'
He cited the fight between the Trump administration and U.S. District Judge James Boasberg as one example of how the president and his administration have defied the judiciary's authority.
Last month, Boasberg wrote that he found probable cause to hold the Trump administration in criminal contempt of court for flouting his order to turn back planes carrying deportees to El Salvador, according to Newsweek.
Green said that Trump has an 'authoritarian mentality' and that he disrespects the office of the president.
'So we have this unique opportunity to use impeachment as a deterrent to stop him and prevent what could become more than we have seen in this country in terms of power emanating from a presidency that is out of control,' he told Newsweek.
Green made headlines this year when he interrupted Trump's joint address to Congress in March, shaking his cane and yelling, 'You have no mandate' at the president.
Green was removed from the Capitol that night and The House of Representatives voted to censure Green for his actions, according to PBS.
Trump was impeached twice during his first term as president.
In 2019, the Democrat-controlled House of Representatives impeached Trump for abuse of power and obstruction of Congress. The charges stem from a report asserting that Trump misused the powers of his office to pressure Ukraine into investigating Democrats, including former President Joe Biden and his son, Hunter Biden, according to the Associated Press.
The Republican-controlled Senate, however, acquitted Trump during their trial.
The second time the House impeached Trump was in 2021 following the Jan. 6 insurrection at the Capitol. Trump was charged with inciting an insurrection.
Like his first trial, the Senate voted to acquit the president.
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