So if a “quorum” of GOP Senators vote to “remove” Biden after he flees from murderous Proud Boys who have seized and set fire to government buildings in D.C., and threatened the White House is next if he doesn’t leave office, you’d be ok with that?
That’d pass constitutional muster in your view?
So if our Supreme Court says it’s ok for a “quorum” of Senators to vote to “remove” the President, you’re ok with that? For real?
Think about if the next election cycle brings more GOP Senators, but Trump loses a close election and violence descends on the capitol. Do we you assert that the Congress can make up the rules as they go along, so long as the Supreme Court provides its blessing?
What do you think Victoria Nuland was talking about ‘making stick’ weeks before murderous violence ratcheted up again, and directly threatened the elected president?
It was this interim government if you’re slow on the uptake.
Coups are often followed by interim governments:
Guinea Interim Assembly Holds First Post-Coup Session
February 06, 2022
…The U.S. ambassador to Guinea, Troy Fitrell, congratulated the country on the new CNT.
"Work starts today to return democracy to the Guinean people," he wrote in a tweet. "The challenge is to do it in 2022."
It was a functioning democracy before the coup removed a duly elected president.
US coups against democratically elected governments aren’t novel.
EU said the 2010 presidential election was free and fair. These facts are not propaganda just because you can’t cleanly insert them into the neocon interventionist foreign policy narrative that keeps dragging us into wars.
Is this Kremlin propaganda?
THE WASHINGTON POST
9 February 2010
By Philip P. Pan
International monitors on Monday described Ukraine's presidential election as free and fair, putting pressure on Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko to concede defeat despite a tight vote count and charges of irregularities.
Tymoshenko, the heroine of Ukraine's Orange Revolution, canceled a news conference and appeared to be mulling a court challenge as opposition leader Viktor Yanukovych held on to a lead of 3 percentage points with more than 99 percent of votes counted.