Interview with Sergey Rogov
Recently, the international agenda has been dominated by the tensions in Russia–U.S. relations, the probable impeachment of Donald Trump, the sanctions regime and the destruction of arms control mechanisms. We asked RIAC Member and Scientific Director of Institute for U.S. and Canadian Studies of the Russian Academy of Sciences
Sergey Rogov
to share his thoughts on these ...
... New Yorker’s well-known political satirist Andy Borowitz in May, 2017. After Trump’s 2017 January inauguration, the topic of his possible impeachment became one of the most popular both in media and the U.S. establishment.
“After the inevitable impeachment of Donald Trump will come President Mike Pence – and it won't be so bad,”
reads the headline
of the column written by one of the authors of The Independent, Sean O’Greidy. In this article, the journalist imagines that Trump is impeached and Vice-President ...
... to results of the Civil War. Not only was Johnson the member of the Democratic Party, he also opposed the reforms that the Republicans were trying to push forth, and he imposed a veto on the most of the projected laws suggested by the Congress.
For Donald Trump, this nuance in this history is important only in the consideration of the fact that the Republicans were able to initialize the impeachment procedure only after the victory at the midterm elections in the Congress in 1866. As a result, the House of Representatives mobilized to the impeachment process, and three quarters of its membership accused Johnson of the attempt to sabotage ...