

“Being your president has been the honor of my life.” Trump
(Photo: Reuters)


“Will not act to oust Trump.” Both
(Photo: AP)
“America is, and must always be, a nation of law and order,” Trump added. “The demonstrators who infiltrated the Capitol defiled the seat of American democracy.”
According to Trump, “We’ve had intense elections, and the emotions are great. We need to calm the spirits and move forward.” However, he also noted that his campaign continues to take “every legal step” to challenge the results, and called for election security reform. According to Trump, “My only goal is to ensure the credibility of the results. That’s how I fight to defend American democracy.”
The riots in the Capitol building
(Photo: Reuters)
After saying these things, Trump acknowledged at the end of his term: “Congress has approved the results. A new administration will be sworn in on January 20. My focus right now will be on a smooth and orderly transfer of power. This is a moment we must move towards healing and reconciliation. 2020 was challenging for us. We must work together to rebuild the plague and rebuild the world’s largest economy. “
“Being your president has been the honor of my life,” Trump concluded. “And to all my amazing supporters – I know you are disappointed, but I want you to know that our amazing journey has just begun.”


“We expect the Vice President and the administration to honor their oath to the American people.” Pelosi and Shumer
(Photo: EPA)
Trump’s statement comes after a full day in which he did not address the riots and did not address the public. During the president’s silence, winds were blowing in the United States, and lawmakers and senators even called for his removal under the 25th Amendment, which allows the vice president and cabinet members to remove an unfit president. Senate Speaker Nancy Pelosi and the Democratic minority leader in the Senate Chuck Schumer, demanded yesterday from the administration to act for dismissal – and last night they announced that they had addressed the issue to Vice President Mike Pence, who did not return a reply.
In a joint statement issued tonight by Shumer and Pelosi, they argued that “Trump should be ousted because of his incitement to rebellion, and the danger he still poses. His dangerous and inciting actions require him to be fired immediately. We expect the vice president to respond positively.” . However, according to U.S. reports, Lantern is not expected to act to oust Trump in the remaining time – though cabinet ministers approached him and asked him to do so.


In both dismissal scenarios, he becomes president until Biden takes office. lantern
(Photo: EPA)
Despite the Democrats’ will, sources close to President-elect Joe Biden told CNN that he has no intention of initiating a dismissal process against Trump, as he prefers to focus on his inauguration on January 20. “Dismissal will not help unite this country,” said one insider, adding that “this is a matter that needs to be decided in Congress.”
There are two ways to remove a president from office: one is to file an indictment against him in a dismissal process in the House of Representatives, and then convict the president by a two-thirds majority in the Senate – a procedure already Conducted against Trump in the “Ukraine Gate” affair But ended in his acquittal; And the second is the implementation of the 25th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which is intended to regulate the transfer of power from the president to his deputy in the event that the president is unable to continue in office.
In both scenarios, initiating the proceeding against Trump would result in the transfer of power to his deputy, Mike Pence, for the remaining days of the current administration.
25th Amendment to the Constitution, Approved in 1967 following the assassination of President John F. Kennedy in 1963, deals with the question of the transfer of presidential powers in the event that the president is unable to perform his duties – whether by choice or not. Article 4 of the amendment deals with situations in which the president is unable to perform his duties – but does not resign voluntarily. Experts say the drafters of the amendment no doubt intended this clause to take effect when the president loses his ability to function due to a physical or mental illness. Some experts also argue that this section can be applied not only to a president who is ill, but also to a president who is dangerously incompetent.


Demonstrators in the Capitol building
(Photo: gettyimages)


Ministers in the administration resigned following the riots. The break into the Capitol
(Photo: gettyimages)


The Confederate flag in the Capitol building
(Photo: Reuters)


Cops in the Capitol building during the riots
(Photo: Reuters)






The outrage over Trump stems from his conduct in the pre-breakout demonstration in the Capitol, in what he said at the time of the break-in – and in his late call for protesters to leave the building. Before the riots began, Trump addressed a mass rally and incited his supporters: “We will never give up, we will never acknowledge the loss. Our country has suffered enough, we will not tolerate it anymore, we will stop the theft.” He called on Lantern not to approve the results, and after the vice president refused to do so, he claimed on Twitter that “Mike Lantern did not have the courage to do what was necessary to protect our country and the constitution.”
At the height of the riots and after the break-in of the Congress building, Trump tweeted: “Please support the Capitol cops. They are truly in favor of our country. Be sure to protest peacefully!”, And yet did not call on his supporters to disperse from the building. He then tweeted: “I ask everyone in the Capitol building to act peacefully. Without violence! Remember, we are the Law and Order Party – respect the law and our wonderful men and women in blue. Thank you!”.
Just three hours after the riots began, Trump posted a recorded message on Twitter, a little over a minute old, in which he called on his supporters to “go home in peace.” However, even in it he incorporated agitating statements such as “stole the election from us”, “these are fake elections” and “took it from me”.
In the shadow of the demand to oust Trump, several members of his government announced in the last day that they were leaving their positions, 13 days before Biden was sworn in. They seem to fear that the riot of Trump supporters will tarnish their reputation, and harm their political future.


“Can’t stand aside.” The resigning minister Elaine Chow
(Photo: Reuters)


“Can’t stay.” Bleached
(Photo: AFP)
Trump’s first cabinet member to resign after the riots is Transportation Minister Elaine Chow, the wife of Republican leader in Senate Mitch McConnell. The resigning minister said the attack was a very disturbing incident and that she “could not resist”.
Another resigner is Mick Mulvani, who was Trump’s chief of staff at the White House, and served as special envoy to Northern Ireland. “I can not do that. I can not stay,” said Mulvani, who informed Secretary of State Mike Pompeo of his resignation.
Molvani served as chief of staff at the White House from January 2019 to March 2020. Prior to that, he headed the Ministry of Management and Budget. “Those who choose to stay, and I will have to talk to some of them, stay because they fear the president might appoint someone worse instead,” Mulvani said. In addition, they resigned following the riots of Matt Putinger, Deputy National Security Adviser, and Ryan Tally, Trump’s senior adviser on relations with Russia and a member of the National Security Council.
Meanwhile, the New York Times reported last night that the president has been discussing with his advisers in recent weeks the possibility of granting himself a pardon, before leaving office on January 20th. “In several talks that have taken place since Election Day, Trump has told his advisers that he is considering pardoning himself,” the paper said. “In other cases he asked if he should do it, and what the legal and political implications would be.” It’s unclear if Trump raised the issue in the last day, after The riots in the Capitol building.
No American president has ever pardoned himself, and experts who spoke to the New York Times said this could be a very dangerous precedent. In the last few weeks of his tenure, Trump has pardoned some of his former associates and advisers, including Michael Flynn and Paul Manport.
White House officials said last night that the day after the riots Trump was very upset. He preferred to be solitary, and was in contact only with a small group of loyal assistants. He shot at anyone who tried to approach him – including his deputy. Later today he is due to leave the White House and spend the weekend at the Presidential Residence at Camp David.