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Norms Impact

In Refusing to Impeach Trump, Congress Has Failed the American People and the World | Common Dreams

By refusing to force impeachment votes, the House normalizes executive lawlessness and abandons its constitutional duty to check war powers, civil-liberties violations, and obstruction of justice.

Congress

Mar 4, 2026

Sources

Summary

House members introduced multiple impeachment resolutions during President Donald Trump’s second term, but the House either tabled them or left them in committee without floor votes. This sustained refusal to deploy a core constitutional accountability tool reflects an institutional retreat from Congress’s role as a co-equal branch, even amid claims of executive usurpation of war powers and obstruction of justice. The practical consequence is that executive actions described as unlawful proceed without formal congressional consequence, while members avoid recorded votes that would define constitutional limits.

Reality Check

When Congress declines to use impeachment as an operational tool—forcing votes, creating a record, and imposing consequences—it weakens the separation of powers in practice, not theory. A legislature that will not put members on record against alleged constitutional violations teaches future presidents that defiance is survivable and repeatable. Over time, that precedent converts accountability from a constitutional mechanism into a discretionary talking point, and our guardrails become optional.

Detail

<p>More than a year into President Donald Trump’s second term, members of the House introduced several impeachment-related measures and then failed to advance them to consequential votes. In April 2025, Rep. Shri Thanedar filed H.Res 353, which the text says was submitted under Rule IX to force action, but Thanedar withdrew it minutes before a vote; it has remained with the House Judiciary Committee for 10 months. In May 2025, Rep. Al Green forced a vote on H.Res 537 to impeach Trump; the House voted to table it.</p><p>In December 2025, Thanedar’s office sought endorsements for H.Res 935 to impeach Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth; the resolution remains in Judiciary without a vote. In early 2026, H.Res 996 to impeach DHS Secretary Kristi Noem gained endorsements from 187 members; Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries said he would pursue impeachment if Noem was not fired, but Noem remained in office and the resolution stayed in committee. The text also describes no filed impeachment articles addressing the Department of Justice’s handling of the Epstein Files despite a near-unanimous vote to release the files and allegations of obstruction by Attorney General Pam Bondi.</p>