It does violence to the English language to assert that a president who has violated a duty entrusted to him by the Constitution is not guilty of official misconduct.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
No one is above the law, not even the president. I believe perjury does meet at least the definition of high misdemeanor.
The President is always abused. If he isn't, he isn't doing anything.
We live in a period in which political disagreements are routinely handed over to the courts. Whenever you think that the president is wrong, you might well cry out that he has violated the Constitution - and ask federal judges to rule accordingly.
A president who breaks the law is a threat to the very structure of our government.
There have been high crimes and misdemeanors, but they have been committed by the special prosecutor and the Congress, not the president.
The one indisputable reality of dictatorship is that dissent, insult, and malevolent language do not go unpunished if it is allowed at all.
I can say that I have not done any culpable violation of the constitution.
The current constitutional law places the president of the republic in an embarrassing situation.
It was not the president's responsibility to run a law enforcement operation. It was ours.
By this act the president alone is empowered to make the law, to fix in his mind what acts, words, what thoughts or looks, shall constitute such a crime.