
Everything will be on the line for conservatives come election time, Trump said. The 2026 elections will decide the fate of the country, he said.
By Catholics for Catholics
Come the midterm elections it could mean sudden death, politically speaking.
President Donald Trump forewarned that his foes from the Democratic party will find a way to impeach him, if voters do not come out in droves to help the Republicans win the midterm elections. Veritable masters of Machiavellian, cutthroat politics, the Left is poised to take control of the House and will not hesitate to vanquish him one way or another, he said.
“You got to win the midterms,” Trump told the House GOP caucus at the Trump-Kennedy Center in Washington at an event that was part of a retreat for the Republican lawmakers, according to a story published by The Epoch Times. “They’ll find a reason to impeach me. I’ll get impeached.”
Republicans will not “impeach them because you know why? Because they’re meaner than we are,” the president said, referring to Democrats. “We should have impeached Joe Biden for a hundred different things. “They are mean and smart.”
In short, Trump said come the elections, everything will be on the line.
According to The Times, Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) said a similar augur in December at the Turning Point USA America Fest in Arizona, saying that a GOP defeat would lead to impeachment.
“If we lose the House majority, the radical left as you’ve already heard is going to impeach President Trump,” Johnson said, “They’re going to create absolute chaos. We cannot let that happen.”
During his first term, Trump was impeached twice. Once was in 2019 over accusations that he engaged in a quid pro quo scheme with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy during a phone call, and the other happened in early 2021 in the aftermath of the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol breach.
Trump was acquitted both times when the impeachment cases reached the Senate. Trump denied wrongdoing in both instances, describing the House impeachment inquiries as politically motivated.
In order to impeach a president, the House only needs a simple majority. The threshold is set much higher in the Senate, requiring a two-thirds majority to convict a sitting president. Republicans currently have a 53–47 advantage in the upper chamber.
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