NEWS
Capitol Hill on FIRE as Senate Votes Trump OUT. See what happens next!!
The peaceful transfer of power happened with stunning speed.
After the Senate voted 68–32 to remove Donald Trump from office, Vice President JD Vance was sworn in within minutes by Chief Justice John Roberts.
There were no celebrations, no grand inauguration ceremonies—just a tense and historic moment that instantly changed the direction of the country.
For years, political analysts had insisted that removing a sitting president was nearly impossible because the Constitution requires a two-thirds Senate majority.
But in this imagined scenario, the pressure became overwhelming.
Allegations, legal crises, court defiance, collapsing public support, and nonstop media scrutiny pushed several Republicans to break with Trump.
Senators who once defended him concluded that keeping him in office would destroy both their political futures and the Republican Party itself.
Behind closed doors, party leaders feared catastrophic losses among suburban voters, independents, and moderates.
Cabinet officials invoked Section 4 of the 25th Amendment, declaring that Trump was unable to carry out the duties of the presidency.
The House approved articles of removal, and the Senate became the final battlefield.
When Republican senators like Susan Collins, Lisa Murkowski, and Josh Hawley crossed the aisle, the outcome changed history.
The gavel came down, and for the first time ever, a U.S. president was removed from office through constitutional process.
The legal consequences were immediate. Trump lost the protections of the presidency overnight.
He could no longer control the Justice Department, claim executive privilege as broadly, or shield himself from investigations.
Ongoing legal cases suddenly carried real weight, and federal
