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It’s time to impeach. I have voted TWICE this year to advance Articles of Impeachment for Donald Trump. After a year of threats on our own soil and our allies—the Republicans are finally talking openly about impeachment. It’s about damn time. Their votes will be needed. Mr. President, you have been duly warned—now by the GOP.
“It’s About Damn Time”: Why Donald Trump Must Finally Be Impeached
For over a year, the signs have been there. The threats. The intimidation. The reckless statements toward America’s allies. The normalization of chaos in the highest office of the land. And yet, Republicans stayed silent.
Until now.
“I have voted TWICE this year to advance Articles of Impeachment for Donald Trump.” That sentence alone tells a story of persistence in the face of political cowardice. While many lawmakers chose comfort over courage, a few kept pushing the conversation forward. Now, after months of denial and deflection, Republicans are finally talking openly about impeachment.
It’s about damn time.
Donald Trump’s presidency has been marked by a pattern of behavior that would have ended any other political career. From issuing threats on U.S. soil, to antagonizing long-standing allies, to repeatedly blurring the line between personal interest and national duty, Trump has governed as though the rules simply do not apply to him.
Impeachment is not about revenge. It is not about party politics. It is about accountability.
The U.S. Constitution provides impeachment as a safeguard against abuse of power. It exists for moments exactly like this — when a president treats public office as a personal weapon, when rhetoric becomes dangerous, and when democratic norms are treated as obstacles rather than principles.
What makes this moment different is not the evidence — that has been there for a long time. What’s different is the silence breaking on the Republican side. The same party that shielded Trump through scandals, investigations, and controversies is now being forced to confront reality: the damage is too big to ignore.
“Mr. President, you have been duly warned — now by the GOP.”
That line hits hard because it signals a shift. Trump is no longer just being challenged by his critics. He is being questioned by his own political base. And that is exactly what makes impeachment possible.
History will not remember who stayed neutral. It will remember who acted when it mattered.
Impeachment is not the end of democracy — it is proof that democracy is still alive. It is the system reminding a powerful man that no one, not even the president, is above the law.
The warning has been issued. The conversations have started. The excuses are running out.
Now, the only real question is:
Will Congress finally choose the Constitution over Donald Trump?
