This article first appeared    on the Daily Signal.  
    Its a movement that began before President Donald Trump was    sworn into office and the drive for impeachment has gone    through many iterations.  
    The earliest rationale was the Constitutions emoluments    clause, which came amid loose talk of the Trump campaigns    alleged collusion with Russia and emerged as the dominant    theme.  
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    In lieu of a smoking gun in the Russian matter, the prevailing    justification became that Trump tried to obstruct an FBI probe    of his former national security adviser.  
    More recently, the emoluments issue re-emerged when Democratic    lawmakers filed lawsuits.  
    MoveOn.org, Democracy for America, and other progressive or    resistance groups have been advocating for it. Rep. Maxine    Waters, D-Calif., appears to have gotten the most airtime of    anyone in Congress talking about impeaching the president on    talk shows and public events.  
    Rep. Al Green, D-Texas, delivered the first House floor speech    calling for impeaching Trump. Rep. Jackie Speier, D-Calif.,    called impeachment really the only way we can go.  
    But only Rep. Brad Sherman, D-Calif., actually has introduced articles of    impeachment. Greens speech and Shermans measure focused    on allegations of obstruction of justice.  
            Donald    Trump on the second day of the G20 economic summit on July 8,    2017 in Hamburg, Germany. Sean Gallup/Getty  
    The Houses Democratic leadership hasnt taken up the call, in    part because such actions are unlikely, based on known facts,    to go anywhere in a Republican-controlled Congress.  
    Before getting elected to anything, Boyd Roberts, a California    congressional candidate, filed documents with the Federal    Election Commission to start a political action committee    called Impeach Trump Leadership PAC, as The Hill reported.  
    The shifting rationales demonstrate a weak argument, said Ken    Boehm, chairman of the National Legal and Policy Center, a    conservative government watchdog group.  
    If they had a good case based on real information, I think    they would mention it by now and put their cards on the table,    Boehm, a former Pennsylvania state prosecutor and former    counsel for the board of directors at the Legal Services    Corporation, told The Daily Signal. They dont have high    crimes and misdemeanors. They dont have low crimes and    misdemeanors.  
    Article II, Section 4 of the    Constitution includes high crimes and misdemeanors as grounds    for impeachment, along with treason and bribery.  
    But impeachment is ultimately a political question and    Republicans control the House of Representatives. Even if    Democrats managed to flip the House and Senate in the 2018    election, it would require a majority vote in the House to    impeach a president and two-thirds of the Senate to remove a    president from office.  
    Boehm said overheated impeachment talk now will delay justice    if the president is involved in a legitimate, verifiable    scandal.  
    Democrats should save the heavy artillery for substance,    Boehm said. They run the risk of being the boy who cried wolf    if they say impeach about everything.  
    The early framework was set in December 2016, six weeks before    Inauguration Day, when five Senate DemocratsElizabeth Warren    of Massachusetts, Ben Cardin of Maryland, Chris Coons of    Delaware, Dick Durbin of Illinois, and Jeff Merkley of Oregon    sponsored a bill that would    require the president, vice president, and their family members    to divest from anything that could create a conflict of    interest.  
    The Deemocrats bill also states:  
      Adopting a sense of the Congress that the presidents      violation of financial conflicts of interest laws or the      ethics requirements that apply to executive branch employees      constitute a high crime or misdemeanor under the impeachment      clause of the U.S. Constitution     
    Before he took office, Trump put his liquid properties such as    hotels and golf courses into a trust and resigned from official    positions with his businesses, turning the Trump Organization    over to his adult sons.  
    In January, a liberal watchdog group, Citizens for Ethics and    Responsibility in Washington, began raising questions about    Trumps businesses and the emoluments clause of the    Constitution, which states that:  
       no Person holding any Office of Profit or Trust under      them, shall, without the Consent of the Congress, accept of      any present, Emolument, Office, or Title, of any kind      whatever, from any King, Prince, or foreign State.    
    Essentially, the clause prohibits personally profiting from    public office. Trumps children run his businesses now, but    there is not a blind trust.  
    In February, Rep. Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y., filed a  resolution of inquiry  into    Trumps investments that a Huffington Post column framed as the first    legislative step toward impeachment.  
    Citizens for Ethics and Responsibility in Washington, or CREW,    filed a lawsuit in the Southern District of New York on Jan.    22, two days after Trump took office.  
    We did not want to get to this point. It was our hope that    President Trump would take the necessary steps to avoid    violating the Constitution before he took office, CREW    Executive Director Noah Bookbinder said in a statement. He did    not. His constitutional violations are immediate and serious,    so we were forced to take legal action.  
    A spokeswoman for the organization told The Daily Signal she    would try to set up an interview with board Chairman Norman    Eisen. However, Eisen didnt respond as of publication    deadline.  
    However, emoluments faded as grounds for impeachment as some    juicy stories about Trump and Russia emerged. After a report in    The Washington Post accused Trump of talking about classified information with    two Russian officials in the Oval Office, Waters said it rose    to the level of impeachment.  
    In May, Waters referred to that alleged    sharing of secrets during the Oval Office discussion at the    Center for American Progress, a liberal research organization.    The California congresswoman said:  
      We dont have to be afraid to use the word impeachment.      We dont have to think that impeachment is out of our reach.      All we have to do is make sure that we are talking to the      American public, that we are keeping them involved, that we      are resisting every day, and we are challenging every      day.    
    Yet another major story occurred after Trump fired FBI Director    James Comey while the bureaus Russia investigation was going    on. Some politicians and commentators compared to President    Richard Nixons Saturday Night Massacre, the multiple firings    related to the investigation of the Watergate scandal.  
    Through a leak Comey admitted to planting, Americans learned of    his accusation that the president asked him to let go of the    FBIs investigation of his former national security adviser,    Michael Flynn, for misrepresenting his pre-inaugural    conversations with the Russian ambassador.  
    Comey said Trump told him, I hope you can see your way clear    to letting this go, to letting Flynn go. He is a good guy. I    hope you can let this go.  
    Democrats were quick to suggest this amounted to obstruction of    justice.  
    Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., told CNN that Trumps    request to Comey may well produce another United States vs.    Nixon on a subpoena that went to the United States Supreme    Court. It may well produce impeachment proceedings, although    were very far from that possibility.  
    Sen. Angus King, I-Maine, who caucuses with Democrats, was    asked by CNNs Wolf Blitzer: If these allegations, Senator,    are true, are we getting closer and closer to the possibility    of yet another impeachment process?  
    King replied : Reluctantly,    Wolf, I have to say yes, simply because obstruction of justice    is such a serious offense.  
    Obstruction of justice has a significant place in impeachment    history. President Bill Clinton was impeached on this charge in    the House in 1998, and it was the basis of one article of    impeachment passed by the House Judiciary Committee in 1974    before Nixon resigned.  
    Obstruction of justice also is the basis for Shermans    impeachment draft.  
    After Comeys June 8 testimony to the Senate Intelligence    Committee provided few revelations, and the obstruction case    became more difficult to make, the focus shifted back to the    emoluments clause. Democratic state attorneys general sued for    information on Trumps business tiesincluding his elusive    income tax returns.  
    Comey told the panel the president    didnt order him to drop the case and, when questioned, said he    knew of no prosecution based on someones hope.  
    Numerous legal scholars said    they didnt believe there was a viable obstruction charge based    on the Feb. 14 Oval Office conversation between Trump and    Comey.  
    With an impeachment case based on Russia and obstruction of    justice not as strong, emoluments made a comeback in June.  
    The I-word is not something you should throw around that much,    and the Democrats are playing fast and loose with the    emoluments lawsuits, where the merits are weak and the standing    claims are laughable, John-Michael Seibler, a legal fellow in    the Edwin Meese III Center for Legal and Judicial Studies at    The Heritage Foundation who has written about Democrats    various suits, told The Daily Signal.  
    Maryland Attorney General Brian Frosh and District of Columbia    Attorney General Karl Racine, both Democrats, sued over the emoluments    clause, accusing the president of violating the    Constitution regarding foreign governments doing business with    the Trump International Hotel in Washington.  
    Following that, 198 congressional Democrats filed a lawsuit    making essentially the same claim.  
    The lawsuits would define emoluments so broadly [that the    provision] would be used against anyone, Seibler said. Its    basically an op-ed before the court.  
    You look at the bill Sen. Warren sponsored, he added. The    lawsuits ask for declaratory judgment to fill in very wide gaps    and reasoning.  
    Fred Lucas is the    White House correspondent for The Daily Signal.  
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Democrat Plans to Impeach Trump Advance on Many Fronts - Newsweek