People are talking about impeachment like it’s imminent — “if he refuses, the consequences will be severe” — but the reality is more textured. In the current U.S. Congress, Democrats don’t hold the majority, which means any serious impeachment push against a sitting president wouldn’t move forward without winning midterms first. In past efforts to impeach Trump, many Democrats in the House have actually voted against moving forward and efforts stalled, largely because impeachment requires a majority in the House and a two-thirds conviction in the Senate — something that hasn’t happened yet.
Meanwhile, online reactions reveal both frustration at what many see as inaction and humor about the mislabeling of roles, and that mix — earnest calls for accountability and skepticism about political feasibility — is shaping how this trend is discussed. If this holds, what we’re really looking at isn’t a formal impeachment shift overnight, but a reflection of rising polarization in discourse itself. The sharp observation here is simple: how people talk about power and consequence online often spreads faster than the formal process that actually changes it.
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