The Democrats-Republican political contestation over articles of impeachment of U.S. Executive
President Donald John Trump was seemingly drifting from crisis to Westfailure of Westphalia. Under the
Westphalia, America sees itself with the responsibility to protect Western-style democracy. Americans see the
United States as the ‘temple of democracy’ and a ‘city on the hills’, which every one observes as a model.
Situating the contestations between Democrats and Republicans on the debate and vote on impeachment of
President Donald John Trump, 18 December 2019, based on two articles: abuse of power and obstruction of
congressional investigation side-by-side with two impeachment bouts of 1868 and 1974 in the U.S., leads one
to thinking that democracy poses internal threat to American security and thus justifies the study of the
United States as a global model of democracy.
Islamophobia is the irrational hostility, fear, or hatred of Islam, Muslims, and Islamic culture at individual, societal or state level
It also connotes active discrimination against these groups or individuals within them with due process of law or without it
It manifests itself through individual attitudes and behaviours, and the policies and practices of organizations and institutions.
This presentation attempts to clarify the concept, analyse its underlying causes, and suggests a plan of action to counter it
Terrorism-historical as well as a universal phenomenon; few countries can claim not to have been affected by this menace which is rising
Has been practised by every type of organisation, religious or non-religious, right-wing or left-wing. Muslims, Christians, Jews, Hindus
Consequently, the reasons for the terrorist activity and the identity of its perpetrators are always subject to context, time, and place.
This presentation attempts to analyse global terrorism from its historical perspective, identify causes, and presents a plan of action to curb it
Though the worst intelligence failure, the USA took maximum advantage of the 9/11 tragedy and embarked on the mission to accomplish the objectives set forth in the infamous neo-con paper, known as the American Century.
America employed all its -military, diplomatic and financial, to wage a war of terror on several countries besides Afghanistan-its starting point.
Whether it was a stellar success or a dismal failure, it has cost the world massively in terms of loss of human lives, financial losses, refugees crises, missed opportunities, and surprisingly, increased global terrorism
This presentation covers all these issues in greater detail
FREEDOM HOUSE ORGANIZATION AND MYANMAR
https://freedomhouse.org/country/myanmar
https://freedomhouse.org/report/freedom-world/2018/myanmar
Freedom in the World 2018
https://freedomhouse.org/article/myanmar-un-reports-evidence-genocidal-intent-against-minorities
Myanmar: UN Reports Evidence of “Genocidal Intent” against Minorities
Freedom House acts as a catalyst for freedom through a combination of analysis, advocacy, and action. Our research and analysis frames the policy debate in the United States and abroad on the progress and decline of freedom. We also empower frontline human rights defenders and civic activists to uphold fundamental rights and to advance democratic change.
CONTACT INFO
Call +1 202-833-5930
info@freedomhouse.org
http://www.freedomhouse.org
MORE INFO
About
Freedom House is an independent watchdog organization dedicated to the expansion of freedom around the world.
Company Overview
Today, as more than two billion people live under oppressive rule, Freedom House speaks out against the main threats to democracy and empowers citizens to exerc... See More
General Information
Freedom House is an independent watchdog organization dedicated to the expansion of freedom around the world.
For general inquiries, please contact info@freedomhouse.org.
categories
Nonprofit Organization · Charity Organization · Organization
https://freedomhouse.org/blog/bangladesh-should-legalize-sim-cards-rohingya-refugees
Bangladesh Should Legalize SIM Cards for Rohingya Refugees
https://freedomhouse.org/article/myanmar-detention-journalists-threatens-press-freedom
Myanmar: Detention of Journalists Threatens Press Freedom
https://freedomhouse.org/article/letter-58-ngos-calling-targeted-economic-sanctions-burma
Letter from 58 NGOs Calling for Targeted Economic Sanctions in Burma
This article aims to present the barbarism represented by fascism in the United States by Donald Trump and in Brazil by Jair Bolsonaro. The barbarism of fascism manifests itself mainly because it is against the democratic and liberal system and is based on the totalitarian exercise of power. In other words, fascism seeks to impose itself under the dictatorship as occurred in the fascist Italy of Benito Mussolini and in Nazi Germany of Adolf Hitler. In the United States, fascism was aborted with the defeat of Donald Trump in the presidential elections, and in Brazil, fascism continues in gestation with Jair Bolsonaro in power.
Islamophobia is the irrational hostility, fear, or hatred of Islam, Muslims, and Islamic culture at individual, societal or state level
It also connotes active discrimination against these groups or individuals within them with due process of law or without it
It manifests itself through individual attitudes and behaviours, and the policies and practices of organizations and institutions.
This presentation attempts to clarify the concept, analyse its underlying causes, and suggests a plan of action to counter it
Terrorism-historical as well as a universal phenomenon; few countries can claim not to have been affected by this menace which is rising
Has been practised by every type of organisation, religious or non-religious, right-wing or left-wing. Muslims, Christians, Jews, Hindus
Consequently, the reasons for the terrorist activity and the identity of its perpetrators are always subject to context, time, and place.
This presentation attempts to analyse global terrorism from its historical perspective, identify causes, and presents a plan of action to curb it
Though the worst intelligence failure, the USA took maximum advantage of the 9/11 tragedy and embarked on the mission to accomplish the objectives set forth in the infamous neo-con paper, known as the American Century.
America employed all its -military, diplomatic and financial, to wage a war of terror on several countries besides Afghanistan-its starting point.
Whether it was a stellar success or a dismal failure, it has cost the world massively in terms of loss of human lives, financial losses, refugees crises, missed opportunities, and surprisingly, increased global terrorism
This presentation covers all these issues in greater detail
FREEDOM HOUSE ORGANIZATION AND MYANMAR
https://freedomhouse.org/country/myanmar
https://freedomhouse.org/report/freedom-world/2018/myanmar
Freedom in the World 2018
https://freedomhouse.org/article/myanmar-un-reports-evidence-genocidal-intent-against-minorities
Myanmar: UN Reports Evidence of “Genocidal Intent” against Minorities
Freedom House acts as a catalyst for freedom through a combination of analysis, advocacy, and action. Our research and analysis frames the policy debate in the United States and abroad on the progress and decline of freedom. We also empower frontline human rights defenders and civic activists to uphold fundamental rights and to advance democratic change.
CONTACT INFO
Call +1 202-833-5930
info@freedomhouse.org
http://www.freedomhouse.org
MORE INFO
About
Freedom House is an independent watchdog organization dedicated to the expansion of freedom around the world.
Company Overview
Today, as more than two billion people live under oppressive rule, Freedom House speaks out against the main threats to democracy and empowers citizens to exerc... See More
General Information
Freedom House is an independent watchdog organization dedicated to the expansion of freedom around the world.
For general inquiries, please contact info@freedomhouse.org.
categories
Nonprofit Organization · Charity Organization · Organization
https://freedomhouse.org/blog/bangladesh-should-legalize-sim-cards-rohingya-refugees
Bangladesh Should Legalize SIM Cards for Rohingya Refugees
https://freedomhouse.org/article/myanmar-detention-journalists-threatens-press-freedom
Myanmar: Detention of Journalists Threatens Press Freedom
https://freedomhouse.org/article/letter-58-ngos-calling-targeted-economic-sanctions-burma
Letter from 58 NGOs Calling for Targeted Economic Sanctions in Burma
This article aims to present the barbarism represented by fascism in the United States by Donald Trump and in Brazil by Jair Bolsonaro. The barbarism of fascism manifests itself mainly because it is against the democratic and liberal system and is based on the totalitarian exercise of power. In other words, fascism seeks to impose itself under the dictatorship as occurred in the fascist Italy of Benito Mussolini and in Nazi Germany of Adolf Hitler. In the United States, fascism was aborted with the defeat of Donald Trump in the presidential elections, and in Brazil, fascism continues in gestation with Jair Bolsonaro in power.
How fear and ignorance birth the unpredictable in americaJoel Leon
"When all institutions are under the dictate of a single thought or a single party, I mean the 3 powers of the state, legislative / judicial / executive, the citizen becomes a hero. In fact, the last shield to defend freedom. Montesquieu, Hobbes, and Fanon are in danger. "
EDUCATION: Who defines and exploited policies? Exploring the Peru and beyondrubèn ramos
Education in the context of geopolitics, economics, financial and institutional cooperation that imposes and instrumented for their benefit and that of their partners and foreign investors natives "strategic" allies. All in an effort to ensure the education of the "new middle class" at the expense of public education that will be left only to the poorest. Testing the "social inclusion" of who pontificate our upstarts and obsequious rulers.
National Humanities Center Resource Toolbox
The Making of African American Identity: Vol. III, 1917-1968
Stokely Carmichael.Toward Black Liberation The Massachusetts Review Autumn 1966 Excerpt*
Realism is a buzzword in US foreign policy. Patrick Callahan's definition in his book, Logics of American Foreign Policy, Theories of America’s World Role, helps to understand it better
Abstract: This study examined United States and democratization in Iraq. The study was anchored on the
democratic peace theory as propounded by Immanuel Kant in 1795. The study adopted ex-post research design
while data was gotten from secondary source such as textbooks, journal articles, newspapers, magazines and
internet and the data generated was analyzed through content analysis. The findings of the study showed that The
United States efforts to adoptive democracy was widely implemented by a range of governmental and nongovernmental actors in Iraq, but it has yielded far less than what was promised and United States interest has had
negative effects on democratization in Iraq as the dissolution of the Iraqi army has resulted to security vacuum in
Iraq. Based on the findings the study recommended among others; Democracy should not be seen as a United
States import but rather an indigenous adaptation of general principles by Iraqi people.
How fear and ignorance birth the unpredictable in americaJoel Leon
"When all institutions are under the dictate of a single thought or a single party, I mean the 3 powers of the state, legislative / judicial / executive, the citizen becomes a hero. In fact, the last shield to defend freedom. Montesquieu, Hobbes, and Fanon are in danger. "
EDUCATION: Who defines and exploited policies? Exploring the Peru and beyondrubèn ramos
Education in the context of geopolitics, economics, financial and institutional cooperation that imposes and instrumented for their benefit and that of their partners and foreign investors natives "strategic" allies. All in an effort to ensure the education of the "new middle class" at the expense of public education that will be left only to the poorest. Testing the "social inclusion" of who pontificate our upstarts and obsequious rulers.
National Humanities Center Resource Toolbox
The Making of African American Identity: Vol. III, 1917-1968
Stokely Carmichael.Toward Black Liberation The Massachusetts Review Autumn 1966 Excerpt*
Realism is a buzzword in US foreign policy. Patrick Callahan's definition in his book, Logics of American Foreign Policy, Theories of America’s World Role, helps to understand it better
Abstract: This study examined United States and democratization in Iraq. The study was anchored on the
democratic peace theory as propounded by Immanuel Kant in 1795. The study adopted ex-post research design
while data was gotten from secondary source such as textbooks, journal articles, newspapers, magazines and
internet and the data generated was analyzed through content analysis. The findings of the study showed that The
United States efforts to adoptive democracy was widely implemented by a range of governmental and nongovernmental actors in Iraq, but it has yielded far less than what was promised and United States interest has had
negative effects on democratization in Iraq as the dissolution of the Iraqi army has resulted to security vacuum in
Iraq. Based on the findings the study recommended among others; Democracy should not be seen as a United
States import but rather an indigenous adaptation of general principles by Iraqi people.
PS 1010, American Government 1 Course Learning Out.docxadkinspaige22
PS 1010, American Government 1
Course Learning Outcomes for Unit I
Upon completion of this unit, students should be able to:
1. Summarize the origins of American political thought.
1.1 Identify how the Enlightenment and philosophers such as John Locke influenced the Founding
Fathers.
1.2 Indicate the major goals of the Founding Fathers.
1.3 List the events preceding the creation of the Articles of Confederation and the weaknesses that
led to the Articles' demise.
Course/Unit
Learning Outcomes
Learning Activity
1.1
Unit I Lesson
Reading: “2. Foundations of American Government”
Unit I Assignment
1.2
Unit I Lesson
Unit I Assignment
1.3
Unit I Lesson
Reading: “2a. The Colonial Experience”
Reading: “2b. Independence and the Articles of Confederation”
Unit I Assignment
Reading Assignment
To access the following resources, click the links below.
Independence Hall Association. (n.d.). 2. Foundations of American government. Retrieved from
http://www.ushistory.org/gov/2.asp
Independence Hall Association. (n.d.). 2a. The colonial experience. Retrieved from
http://www.ushistory.org/gov/2a.asp
Independence Hall Association. (n.d.). 2b. Independence and the Articles of Confederation. Retrieved from
http://www.ushistory.org/gov/2b.asp
UNIT I STUDY GUIDE
Foundations of American Government
http://www.ushistory.org/gov/2.asp
http://www.ushistory.org/gov/2a.asp
http://www.ushistory.org/gov/2b.asp
PS 1010, American Government 2
UNIT x STUDY GUIDE
Title
Unit Lesson
Many of us have a general concept and
understanding of the leadership of the Founding
Fathers working to establish a government with more
democratic principles and ideals. While the term
Founding Fathers is used a great deal, one must note
that there was a general sense of agreement on the
need for a new government and country, but there
were differences in their political ideologies. Some
Founding Fathers were for a more powerful federal
government, while others were more focused on state
powers. The point to be made here is that the
Founding Fathers were not an ideologically unified
group of people. The Founding Fathers had a vision
of making America a melting pot, but the path of
setting up a different style of government had many
trials and tribulations. After many obstacles were
overcome, the United States was formed under the
political structure of a democratic republic, which is
mentioned in the Pledge of Allegiance. In this unit, the
thoughts and strategies behind the founding of the
United States and the ideas and principles utilized to
create the Constitution will be examined.
In the Beginning
What is politics? What part do citizens have in the political process? The United States has a political culture
that began during Colonial times and was refined during the Revolutionary War. When the colonists declared
their independence from Great Britain, the Founding Fathers declared.
PS 1010, American Government 1 Course Learning Out.docxShiraPrater50
PS 1010, American Government 1
Course Learning Outcomes for Unit I
Upon completion of this unit, students should be able to:
1. Summarize the origins of American political thought.
1.1 Identify how the Enlightenment and philosophers such as John Locke influenced the Founding
Fathers.
1.2 Indicate the major goals of the Founding Fathers.
1.3 List the events preceding the creation of the Articles of Confederation and the weaknesses that
led to the Articles' demise.
Course/Unit
Learning Outcomes
Learning Activity
1.1
Unit I Lesson
Reading: “2. Foundations of American Government”
Unit I Assignment
1.2
Unit I Lesson
Unit I Assignment
1.3
Unit I Lesson
Reading: “2a. The Colonial Experience”
Reading: “2b. Independence and the Articles of Confederation”
Unit I Assignment
Reading Assignment
To access the following resources, click the links below.
Independence Hall Association. (n.d.). 2. Foundations of American government. Retrieved from
http://www.ushistory.org/gov/2.asp
Independence Hall Association. (n.d.). 2a. The colonial experience. Retrieved from
http://www.ushistory.org/gov/2a.asp
Independence Hall Association. (n.d.). 2b. Independence and the Articles of Confederation. Retrieved from
http://www.ushistory.org/gov/2b.asp
UNIT I STUDY GUIDE
Foundations of American Government
http://www.ushistory.org/gov/2.asp
http://www.ushistory.org/gov/2a.asp
http://www.ushistory.org/gov/2b.asp
PS 1010, American Government 2
UNIT x STUDY GUIDE
Title
Unit Lesson
Many of us have a general concept and
understanding of the leadership of the Founding
Fathers working to establish a government with more
democratic principles and ideals. While the term
Founding Fathers is used a great deal, one must note
that there was a general sense of agreement on the
need for a new government and country, but there
were differences in their political ideologies. Some
Founding Fathers were for a more powerful federal
government, while others were more focused on state
powers. The point to be made here is that the
Founding Fathers were not an ideologically unified
group of people. The Founding Fathers had a vision
of making America a melting pot, but the path of
setting up a different style of government had many
trials and tribulations. After many obstacles were
overcome, the United States was formed under the
political structure of a democratic republic, which is
mentioned in the Pledge of Allegiance. In this unit, the
thoughts and strategies behind the founding of the
United States and the ideas and principles utilized to
create the Constitution will be examined.
In the Beginning
What is politics? What part do citizens have in the political process? The United States has a political culture
that began during Colonial times and was refined during the Revolutionary War. When the colonists declared
their independence from Great Britain, the Founding Fathers declared ...
A review of Woodrow Wilson's reflections on the breakdown of state governance in France during the French revolution compared to United State of America's governance structures based on democracy as a governance phenomenon.
Impact of Green Attitude on Green Work Behavior: An Empirical Study of Employ...AJSSMTJournal
As interesting and important areas, Green Attitude (GA) and Green Work Behavior (GWB) are
examined considering the employees in a Sri Lankan tiles manufacturing company. The main objective of the
study is to explore the impact of GA on employees’ GWB. Using simple random sampling, 81 employees were
selected as the sample and primary data were gathered using two self-developed instruments regarding to GA
and GWB. Univariate and bivariate analyses were conducted to analyze the data and the main finding of the
study is that there is a positive and significant impact from GA on GWB of the employees in the selected tiles
manufacturing company. As the recommendation of the study authors instruct the companies in the tiles
manufacturing industry to develop employees’ green attitude for the better work behavior in greening
The Effect of Competence and Teacher Certification on Performance of “Vocatio...AJSSMTJournal
This study aims to determine the effect of teacher competency and certification on teacher
performance with motivation as an intervening variable. This research is motivated by the still low competency
of teachers, not all teachers who carry out their tasks well, teachers' motivation is still low, teacher's
performance has not reached the target in SMK Kerinci Regency. The research method with a quantitative
approach with the path analysis method. Data collection techniques with questionnaires, observation and
interviews. The respondents of this study were 53 Vocational High School Teachers in Kerinci Regency. The
sampling method uses the total sampling method in which the entire population in this study is the research
sample. Hypothesis testing was calculated with the IBM Statistical Package for Social Science (SPSS) program
version 24.0.
The results of this study found that competence has a significant effect on teacher motivation, teacher
certification has a significant effect on teacher motivation, motivation has a significant effect on teacher
performance, competence has a significant effect on teacher performance, teacher certification has a significant
effect on teacher performance, competence has no significant effect on performance with motivation as an
intervening variable, and teacher certification has a significant effect on performance with motivation as an
intervening variable on Vocational High School Teachers in Kerinci Regency.
Gender Differences on Organizational Commitment: Empirical Evidence from Empl...AJSSMTJournal
Organizational commitment is considered as a crucial factor that has a direct impact on
organizational outcomes. A systematic empirical study was carried out to address the existing contextual gap
and intellectual curiosity on gender differences in organizational commitment on apparel industry workers of Sri
Lanka. The main objective of the study was to investigate whether there is a significant difference among male
and female employees in terms of the level of organizational commitment in the apparel industry of Sri Lanka.
This is an analytical nature study and unit of analysis is individual employees. The survey method was utilized,
and 100 employees responded to the author developed questionnaire using random sampling technique. The
instrument used to measure organizational commitment was adopted by Allen and Meyers’ standard
questionnaire which consists of a multi-component model include; affective commitment, continuance
commitment, and normative commitment. Reliability and validity of the instruments used were assured. The
empirical findings revealed that there is no significant difference between male and female employees in terms
of organizational commitment in the apparel industry of Sri Lanka.
Teaching with Frequent Tests and its Consequences on Students’ Performance in...AJSSMTJournal
The intricacies of good teaching are known only to experienced teachers. Teaching is assessment
and, learning and retention are functions of regular testing. This study theorises classroom assessments and
links them with implicit theories of learning and retention of knowledge. The subjects of the study were
motivated to maintain the momentum of learning through taking regular tests and subjected to counselling and
regular feedback on the tests they took. The study analysed statistically semester results for five different year
groups of students taught Quantum Mechanics by the same lecturer who adopted weekly testing. The results
show substantial continuous improvements in students’ academic achievement. The results may be indictments
on lecturers who do not use classroom tests to motivate students’ learning.
The Effect of Competence and Organizational Culture on Work Motivation and It...AJSSMTJournal
This study aims to determine the purpose of competence and organizational culture on employee
performance with motivation as a mediating variable. This research is motivated by level of employee ability or
employee competency is still low so that employee performance becomes difficult to achieve, relations between
colleagues in the organization are still low, Employee motivation and encouragement from the organization still
cannot impact employee performance and the performance of employees who are still not stable so that target
institutions have not been achieved.
The research method with a quantitative approach with the path analysis method. Data collection techniques
with questionnaires, observation and interviews. The respondents of this study were 42 employees of Kayu Aro
Barat District. The sampling method uses the total sampling method in which the entire population in this study
is the research sample. Hypothesis testing was calculated with the IBM Statistical Package for Social Science
(SPSS) program version 24.0.
The results of this study found that competence has a significant effect on work motivation, organizational
culture has a significant effect on work motivation, work motivation has a significant effect on employee
performance, competence has a significant effect on employee performance, organizational culture has a
significant effect on employee performance, work motivation as a mediating variable does not have a significant
effect between competence and employee performance, work motivation as a mediating variable does not have
a significant effect between organizational culture and employee performance at Kayu Aro Barat District Kerinci
Regency.
Effects of Perceived Workplace Incivility on Presenteeism Perceptions: A Rese...AJSSMTJournal
There are many different presenteeism conceptualizations in the business literature, and despite
some insights about underlaying presenteeism factors, further research is still needed in this emerging area. One
of such factors is claimed to be incivility within the business context. There is, however, not ample research about
these factor’s connections with presenteeism itself. Taking this gap into account, the aim of this study is to
scrutinize any possible effects of business members’ perceived workplace incivility on their presenteeism
perceptions. Data are collected via questionnaires from the members of small and medium sized enterprises
(SMEs) in Ikitelli Organized Industrial Zone in Istanbul, Turkey. A total of 183 participants are contacted. There is a
statistically significant connection between the participants’ perceived incivility and presenteeism, implying that
these two negative business aspects are actually related. This finding clearly points out that perceptions of
undesirable, rude, and negative behaviors in the work context is a motivator of the participants’ unwillingness to
be present in their business environment. It is also noteworthy that the perceived incivility is a monolithic aspect,
whereas the perception of presenteeism is composed of perceptions about negativities and resistance, both of
which are related to issues in business context.
Switching Among Brands of Poultry Feeds: The Egg Farmers’ Acuity in Ogun Stat...AJSSMTJournal
In spite of the contribution of poultry to the protein intake and income generation of the growing
population of Nigeria, not many studies have been instituted at understanding the switching behaviour of the
poultry farmers when they make purchases of their major inputs, feed, which empirical evidences showed to
constitute about three-quarter of the variable cost of production. This study was therefore conducted to
address the gap by analysing primary data obtained from 480 poultry Egg-farmers in Ogun State through a
multistage sampling technique. The results revealed that poultry is a male dominated enterprise cutting across
two major religions in the country. Many of the farmers had been in operation for more than eight years and
are relatively educated with a mean age of 41 years. The Switching Cost (Monetized) indicated that, costs was
highest with Top feed users who opted for Vital feed at N2.20/bird/day and least for users of Hybrid who
considered Premium as an option at N0.12/bird/day. Similarly, Switching Cost (Psychological) revealed that
switching from Top feed to Premium feed will also be highest at 4.8 units and least with Hybrid to Chikun at
3.3 units. The study therefore recommended that feed producers should imbibe ways of increasing the likely
switching cost, both monetized and psychological that an Egg-farmer may incur if he switches to the Next Best
Alternative Brand through sound relationship management, lock-in programmes and reward of loyalty
Moonlighting as ‘Coping Strategy’ for Irregular Payment of Salaries in Nigeri...AJSSMTJournal
Moonlighting, a latent but real phenomenon in the Nigerian economic experience is being
considered alongside irregular workers’ monthly salary in Nigeria which has been on since 2015. Moonlighting
- keeping several jobs simultaneously under different employers as an employee, is more real in the western
world due to increasing legal control. In general, it is referred to as ‘hustling’, ‘multiple runs’, extra pursuits, or
‘PiPis’ in several contexts. Data was collected from 323 respondents from 4 Local Government Area
secretariats in Ekiti state through multistage sampling procedure. Statistics indicate a significant relationship [r
(323) = 0.47, p < .05] between workers’ irregular monthly salaries and the practice of moonlighting among
these public servants in Ekiti state. The affinity between irregular monthly salary and moonlighting has
significantly impacted job commitment deficit [r (323) = 0.47, p < .05]. Employees who experience high
irregularities in their salary tend to engage more in moonlighting (Mean=17.71; Std.Dev=4.96), than those who
have little experience of salary irregularities (Mean=15.77; Std.Dev=4.01). Employees who engage more in
moonlighting tend to be less committed (Mean=19.64; SD=3.77), in comparison with those who are less
engaged in moonlighting (Mean=20.30; Std.Dev=3.56). The study has shown that moonlighting has continued
as a habit and a strategy for mitigating the negative impact of irregular payment of workers’ salary among LG
employees. Increasing focus of labour law in that direction might be necessary to prevent its negative impact
on workers’ commitment and productivity in Ekiti State
Variables that Affect the Performance of the Members of the Traffic Unit Polr...AJSSMTJournal
This research aims to determine the variable that affects the performance of the members of the
Traffic Unit (satafterwards) of Padang police with job satisfaction as a Intervening variable. The research
samples are actually 92 members of the Traffic Unit (Satthus) Polresta Padang. The method of research with a
quantitative approach with a pathway analysis method and a hypothesis test using the T test with SPSS is used
to analyse the data. The results showed that: 1) Working discipline has significant effect on job satisfaction, 2)
significant impact on job satisfaction, 3) Working discipline is significant to the performance of members, 4)
significant integrity of the member's performance, 5) job satisfaction has significant effect on the member's
performance, 6) There is no influence of the working discipline variable on the performance of members that
are mediated by job satisfaction, and 7) there is no influence of integrity variables on the performance of
members mediated by job satisfaction.
Conflict and Workers’ Morale in Manufacturing Companies in Rivers State, NigeriaAJSSMTJournal
This piece of work theoretically discussed workers’ morale and conflict in manufacturing
companies in Rivers State with specific elaborations on: the meaning of conflict, workers’ morale, causes and
types of conflict, review of extant literature on conflict and workers’ morale, conflict management, impacts
and the relationship betwixt conflict and workers’ morale in manufacturing companies in Rivers State.
Theoretical framework was based on the traditional and contemporary theories of conflict, the basis of
which the study found that, just like death, conflicts are omnipresent and inevitable in life and abounds in
manufacturing companies in Rivers State as virtually every sphere of the organizations gets ravaged by one
form of conflict or the other ranging from: interpersonal/intergroup conflict, intrapersonal/group conflict,
intra-organizational, constructive or functional conflict, dysfunctional or destructive conflicts. It was deduced
that conflicts occur in organizations as a result of: incompatible goals, different values and beliefs, inconsistent
evaluation and reward system, communication problems, struggle for power, authority/control, and
leadership style, scarcity of common resources, organizational demands and self-worth demands. It was also
found that if a conflict is not aptly and promptly managed, it can lead to truncated or reduced workers’ morale
causing decreased productivity, failure to attain set goals, absenteeism, low service delivery, profit reduction,
frustration, anger, fear, distrust or resentment amongst the workers’. Again, the nature of the conflict, though,
determines how best it could be managed and conflict can sometimes yield positive workers’ morale or result
if well managed, meaning that not all conflict situations are negatively inclined. The recommendation is that
efforts should constantly be made to ensure that the causes of conflicts are handled timely as apt detection
and handling of conflicting parties/issues will resolve concerns amicably. Workers should be oriented with the
importance of peaceful coexistence in the workplace as coercion or intimidation will only lead to counter
productivity/low morale. It is suggested that this study be repeated in different organizational setting and in
other states in Nigeria. This findings and recommendations would provide good practical and theoretical
background for conflict management in organizations in future
Variables that affect Performance with Working Discipline as A Variable Inter...AJSSMTJournal
This research aims to determine empirically the variables affecting performance by working
discipline as a variable Intervening at the education office of Padang. Collection of primary data using poll or
questionnaire techniques. The research population is all civil servants of the Padang City Education Office in
2019. The number 101 research samples were determined using a saturated sampling technique (census).
Analysis of data in this study using path analysis.
The results showed that 1) working competencies have a positive and significant impact on employee
discipline 2) The working culture has a positive and significant effect on employee discipline 3) Working
competency is positive and significant towards employee performance 4) Work culture positive and significant
impact on employee performance 5) Work discipline is positive and significant to the performance of
employees 6) work competency is positive and significant to the employee performance of Padang City
education with working discipline as a intervening variable; 7) The working culture has a positive and
significant impact on the performance of the Padang City Education officer with the working discipline as a
intervening variable
Inclusive education has begun to be addressed within the context of the broader international
debate on “Education for All” (EFA), a debate launched at the World Conference held in 1990 in Jomtien,
Thailand. From Jomtien until today, thinking has evolved from the almost symbolic presence of special
educational needs in the initial documentation, towards the recognition that inclusion must be a fundamental
principle of the EFA movement as a whole. Within this process, the contribution of the Salamanca Declaration
on Special Educational Needs: Access and quality (Unesco, 1994) stands out, from which the concept of
educational inclusion emerges strongly. Thereafter thescope and perspectives of inclusive education has been
based on the idea that all children and young people have the right to a quality education with equivalent
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order to make the process of Teaching-Learning effective. Curriculum is an organised course of study
undertaken by a student in or under the aegis of a school, college, university or any other institution of
learning and more commonly, the set of studies organised for a particular group of students by a school,
college etc. It is the set of desired learning outcomes or the structured set of learning experiences aimed at
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government for development hence the concept local economic development emerged for assemblies to use
their local resources to champion the development of their localities. Deploying both primary and secondary
sources of data, this paper examined the extent of political settlement in the implementation of local
economic development (LED) in Ghana. The study found that the nature of the LED programme, the strategic
nature of the MMDAs, the activism of the actors, the benefits to be derived by the actors, the political party in
power and the need to test new development paradigms shaped the behaviour of actors in the LED
implementation process. The desire of each actor to project its interest above the others culminated into “turf
war” among them in the implementation process. The study recommends that the development of localities
should supersede the interest of actors, locality leadership should be proactive and aggressive in wooing
investors, and incentives should be provided for investors who invest in the hinterlands. Key lessons learnt
were: leadership was significant in LED, collaboration among actors is important for the success of LED.
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between black and white Americans. Tired of the rejection in a country they believe is also theirs; Blacks think
that they have to respond to violence with violence by sacrificing the lives of many Americans, starting with
the President himself. Thus, this study shows not only the war raging between the United States and Colombia,
but also the influence of social movements from the United States on Cuba, with the downfall of Fidel Castro.
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research questions two hypotheses were formulated to guide the study. Two hundred and eighty three (283)
respondents were randomly selected in the six area council. The instrument used for data collection was the
questionnaire. The method of data analysis was the use of descriptive statistic (mean and standard deviation)
Benchmark of 2.5 was used as criterion for agreed and less than 2.5 was considered disagreed. Chi-square
statistics was used to test the Null hypotheses at .05 level of significance. Based on the findings of this study, it
was concluded that various areas of poultry production skills were acquired by graduates of agricultural
education and also employment opportunities for agricultural education graduates in marketing of poultry
products thrive in the study area. It was therefore, recommended that graduates of agricultural education
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Israel. The U.S. declaration introduced unequal relationship between Israel and the Palestinian Authority at the
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show that the majority 246(65.6%) of the respondents were very strongly agreed that they have awareness on
the usage of cell phones for making calls, while 224(59.7%) of them were very strongly agreed that they have
used cell phones to access the Internet. Whereas, 122(32.5%) of the respondents were very strongly agreed
that spending more time on cell phone reduces academic performance. Also 209(55.7%) of the respondents
were very strongly agreed that most students of FUTM faced the challenges of slow Internet connection,
252(67.2%) respondents were very strongly agreed that the wireless Internet infrastructure in the university
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practices of Ido people of Kalabari, an Ijaw tribe in Rivers State, Nigeria, with a view to identifying the precolonial management thoughts and practices embedded in them. This is an ethnographic study which adopted
interviews, group discussion and observation as sources of data collection. Adopting the judgemental
sampling technique, 15 critical stakeholders of Ido Community – six males and nine females participated in the
interview and focused group sessions while the researchers lived as participant observers in the community to
identify the prevailing management practices and their underlying philosophy. The results of the study indicate
that the Ido people were already utilising indigenous management principles and practices before the advent
of colonialism. It was concluded that there is urgent need for more investigations into the traditional practices
of Africa and other developing economies to discover indigenous management theories and practices of these
geographies that will take cognizance of their contextual nuances and environmental peculiarities in order to
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American National Security and Impeachment of Presidents: Westfailure in the ‘Temple of Democracy’
1. 40 Asian Journal of Social Science and Management Technology
Asian Journal of Social Science and Management Technology
ISSN: 2313-7410
Volume 2 Issue 3, May-June, 2020
Available at www.ajssmt.com
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
American National Security and Impeachment of
Presidents: Westfailure in the ‘Temple of
Democracy’
Onyemaechi Augustine Eke Ph.D
Department of International Relations, Gregory University, Uturu, PMB 1012, Amaokwe, Uturu, Abia State
ABSTRACT : The Democrats-Republican political contestation over articles of impeachment of U.S. Executive
President Donald John Trump was seemingly drifting from crisis to Westfailure of Westphalia. Under the
Westphalia, America sees itself with the responsibility to protect Western-style democracy. Americans see the
United States as the ‘temple of democracy’ and a ‘city on the hills’, which every one observes as a model.
Situating the contestations between Democrats and Republicans on the debate and vote on impeachment of
President Donald John Trump, 18 December 2019, based on two articles: abuse of power and obstruction of
congressional investigation side-by-side with two impeachment bouts of 1868 and 1974 in the U.S., leads one
to thinking that democracy poses internal threat to American security and thus justifies the study of the
United States as a global model of democracy.
Keywords : America, Westphalia, democracy, impeachment, national security.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. INTRODUCTION
The impeachment debates for the removal of Executive President of the United States, President Donald John
Trump, which began on Wednesday 18 December 2019 was third in American history, after Andrew Johnson
and Richard M. Nixon as well as another - the ‘first close call’ on President Bill Clinton, respectively in 1868,
1974 and 1998. Congressional impeachments are seemingly drifting from crises to Westfailure of Westphalia.
Under the Westphalia and Western ‘liberal internationalism’ reinforced by ‘American exceptionalism’, America
“sees itself as promoting Western-style democracy and human rights, which are taken to be universally
desired. In promoting these goals the U.S. is simply acting in the global interest” (Brown and Ainley, 2005, p.
13). Although Members of the House of Representatives (MHRs) were enjoined by President Trump to observe
the doctrine of ‘quid-pro-quo’, they rather observed the impeachment process as a sad moment in American
democracy. Congressional power of impeachment is a constitutional provision to strengthen the doctrine of
separation of powers, checks and balances, rule of law, accountability, etc., as underpinnings of American
democracy. Observing these templates, imposes on America the image of temple of democracy, “a ‘city on the
hill’ and an example to the rest of the world” (Brown and Ainley, 2005, p. 13). Americans swore, at
independence, to defend and promote democracy across the globe. In 1941, Times magazine announced the
arrival of the ‘American Century’ and insisted: “A world dominated for centuries by European great powers
would now see its future shaped by the U.S” which has accepted to ‘take up the white man’s burden’ (Brown
and Ainley, 2005, 232 and p. 249).
2. 41 Asian Journal of Social Science and Management Technology
This chapter is divided into eight sections: 1) Introduction; 2) United States as Global Template of Democracy;
3) Democracy and Impeachment of United States' Presidents; 4) Congressional Impeachment of U.S.
Presidents; 5) House Impeachment of President Trump; 6) Senate Trial in Trump’s Impeachment; 7) Effects of
Presidential Impeachments of Presidents on United States’ Security; and 8) Concluding Remarks.
2. UNITED STATES AS GLOBAL TEMPLE OF DEMOCRACY
The U.S. emerged as the only surviving military power with the goal of compelling the United Nations and its
agencies which emerged in the ‘American Century’ to follow U.S. ideological and strategic agenda (Brown and
Ainley, 2005, p. 232) to further the U.S. global interests (Basu, 2004, 405). In the fashion of ‘American
exceptionalism’ under ‘liberal internationalism’ nurtured and sustained by America, the U.S. perceives itself as
a ‘city on a hill’. Thus, “America protects its interests in the world, but it also sees itself as promoting Western-
style democracy and human rights, which are taken to be universally desired” (Brown and Ainley, 2005, p. 13).
In fact, it is argued that “the existing structure of international institutions is indeed a product of
Western/American hegemony and reflects Western values” (Huntington, 1993; 1996).
Based on American goal to promote and support democracy across the globe, the U.S. and Poland founded
Community of Democracies (CDs) as the first intergovernmental organisation of established democracies and
democratising countries. The CDs worked in promoting, deepening and defending democracy across countries
of the world. A ten-member Convening Group (CG) of the CDs, including U.S. and Poland, drafted a statement
of Democratic Principles and Practices that became the “Warsaw Declaration” on open elections to multiple
parties, independent judiciary, freedom of speech, freedom of assembly, etc. (Eke, 2017, p. 133).
Three pillars that shape European/American and African relationship as carefully crafted in Europe’s Marshall
Plan with Africa are the desire to spread western values, ideologies and ideas such as democracy, human right
and rule of law; promote peace and security; and improve economic activity, trade and employment (Federal
Ministry of Economic Cooperation and Development, 2000, p. 12).
Against this background, it is argued that the existing structures and institutions of international system are
defined by globalisation which, according to Thomas Friedman, “shrinks the world from a size medium to a size
small” (Speth, 2003, p. 15). More so, at the inaugural meeting of the CDs, founded and sponsored by the U.S.
in collaboration with Poland to promote, deepen and defend democracy across countries of the world, United
Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan averred: “The principle of democracy is now universally recognised”
(Eke, 2017, p. 132).
Nonetheless, the United States President George Bush also averred that the policy of the United States [is] to
seek and support the growth of democratic movements and institutions in every nation and culture” (Axelrod,
2005). Thus, America conceived democracy as non-exclusive and non-rival global public good (Stern, 1968;
Kaul et al, 1999; Veradzia, 2016) against ‘global’ challenges of the 21st century and was ready to defend
democracy by stealth under the veil of humanitarian intervention.
Democracy promotion by America and Europe has been stretched too far under the guise of humanitarian
intervention in sovereign states such as in Iraq, Kosovo as well as the French in Mali. The American policies and
actions in this regard lead to understanding and interpretation as self-serving and imperialistic by those States
the U.S. curiously tag ‘rogue states’, ‘axis of evil’ or, in Reagan’s parlance, “evil empire” such as “when U.S.
President Reagan directed American naval and air forces to return to [Libya] in 1986 to bombard civilian
targets, guided by the goal of contributing to an international environment of peace, freedom, and progress
within which our democracy – and other free nations – can flourish” (Chomsky, 2000, p. 21).
Judging democracy from the Westphalian principle of peace through freedom vis-à-vis the new trend to
defend democracy movements by stealth, International Society theorists argue that the Westphalian system
has failed and can only work should states recognise the doctrine of states’ sovereignty in their relations
3. 42 Asian Journal of Social Science and Management Technology
(Brown and Ainley, 2005, p. 222). Understanding U.S. as a global temple of democracy starts from sound
understanding of the link between factors responsible for corrosion of American democracy and her national
security.
3. DEMOCRACY AND IMPEACHMENT OF UNITED STATES’ PRESIDENTS
History of impeachment of United States’ presidents dates back to one-and-half century (1868-2019), with
three incidences only two were logically concluded, prior to the impeachment of President Donald John Trump
in December 2019. Constitutionally, by democratic principle of separation of powers, checks and balances,
impeachment process in the United States begins with the lower House [House of Representative] which is
charged with the responsibilities to draft charges or articles for impeachment based on crimes alleged to have
been committed by civil officer of government for trial and disposal action by the upper House [Senate].
Congressional impeachments of U.S. presidents are discussed seriatim.
Impeachment of President Andrew Johnson (1868)
Andrew Johnson’s impeachment was the outcome of political crisis and the rupture of ideologies in the
aftermath of the American Civil War. It began from uncompromised beliefs and a contest for power in a post-
war America struggling with reunification. President Johnson was intent to carry out the liberal and
reconstruction plans of Abraham Lincoln before the latter was assassinated in 1865. Connectedly, Johnson’s
impeachment proceedings began when the president breached the Tenure of Office Act by removing Edwin
Stanton, Secretary of War, from the cabinet against the provision of the Act that “a president could not dismiss
appointed officials without the consent of Congress.”
On 27 January 1868, Mr Spalding moved a suspension of the rules, which allowed him raise the motion:
“…That Andrew Johnson, President of the United States, be impeached of high crimes and misdemeanors in
office.” Spalding’s motion was supported by overwhelming 128 'Yeas' vote, against 47 'nays' votes to become
the Resolution of the House for impeachment process against President Johnson. Thus, President Johnson’s
impeachment process was broadly anchored on allegations of “high crimes and misdemeanors” encapsulated
in 11 articles or charges (United States House of Representatives, 24 February 1868) by the “Radical
Republicans” of 40th House of Representatives (1867-1869). The 11 articles of impeachments were:
Articles 1, that the order for Stanton removal was with the intent to violate the Tenure of Office Act;
Articles 2, 3 and 8 alleged that the appointment of General Lorenzo Thomas (26 October 1804 – 2
March 1975), to replace Stanton, without the advice and consent of the Senate was a further violation
of the Constitution;
Articles 4 and 7 accused Johnson of conspiring with Thomas to remove Stanton, citing such conspiracy
as a “high crime in office,” thus illegally depriving Stanton of his rightful possessions;
Article 9 accused Johnson of diverting orders and instructions related to military operations through
the general of the army, bypassing secretary Stanton;
Article 10 charged Johnson with making speeches “with a loud voice, certain intemperate,
inflammatory, and scandalous harangues” with the intent to disgrace Congress; and
Article 11 accused Johnson of declaring the 39th Congress unconstitutional, since it was a Congress of
only part of the states, and therefore did not have legislative powers to propose constitutional
amendments – a misdemeanor against his presidential oath requiring him to “take care that the laws
be faithfully executed” (United States Senate, n.d.)
The House of Representatives impeached President Johnson on 24 February 1868 by 126 to 47 votes on
grounds to protect the office of the president and preserve the constitutional balance of powers as it were.
Eight of the articles of impeachment dealt with alleged violation of the Tenure of Office Act by President
Johnson.
4. 43 Asian Journal of Social Science and Management Technology
On 16 May 1868, the Senate voted 35 in favour and 19 against on article 11, one vote short of the mandatory
two-thirds majority to impeach American president (U.S. Department of Interior, 14 August 2017). Ten days
later, the Senate trial failed to convict President Johnson on article 2 and 3 by the same margin, after which
the Senators voted to adjourn the trial. Despite the vote-verdict on the articles of impeachments, the remote
causes of his travail were that Johnson was a Southerner from hitherto seceding Tennessee State, a Democrat,
and ‘too soft’ on the South.
Impeachment Process against President Richard M. Nixon (1973-1974)
On 30 October 1973, the U.S. House of Representatives commenced impeachment process on the 37th U.S.
President Richard M. Nixon (Republican) following series of events that took place on the evening of Saturday
20 October 1973 which were connected to the “Watergate scandal.” In these events, President Nixon, among
others, ordered Attorney-General Elliot Richardson to fire independent special prosecutor Archibald Cox,
which led to the refusal and immediate resignation of Richardson from office.
Consequently, Nixon ordered Deputy Attorney-General William Ruckelshaus to fire Cox but also, Ruckelshaus
refused and resigned. Nixon, unrelenting, ordered the third-most senior official after Ruckelshaus, Judge
Robert Bork to fire Cox and Bork reluctantly obeyed the presidential directive.
The dismissal of Cox led to public outcry within ten days of which U.S. Congress received more than 300,000
telegrams, most calling for President Nixon’s resignation. These whole events prompted the impeachment
process of President Nixon, as it were, ten days later on 30 October 1973. A special counsel was appointed on
1 November 1973 and on 14 November 1973, a court ruled that the dismissal of Cox was illegal (Noble, 26 July
1987, p. 23). The impeachment process was, therefore, anchored on three articles:
obstruction of congressional investigation of the “Watergate” burglary inquiry’
misuse of law-enforcement; and
refusal to comply with the Judiciary Committee’s subpoenas.
With the release of ‘smoking gun tape’ on 5 August 1974, which made clear Nixon’s complicity in the
Watergate scandal, bipartisan leaders in the House were certain that President Nixon would be impeached by
a substantial majority in the full House with great possibility of his conviction in the Senate trial.
Given the murky situation in which Republican congressional leaders had told President Nixon that both his
impeachment and his conviction were certainties, Nixon, in a State of the Union address on 30 January 1974,
asserted that he had no “intention whatsoever” of resigning, but he did indeed, resigned before the House
could vote on the articles of impeachment and thus became the only U.S. president who left office till 2019
based on impeachment process (Silverstein, 19 November 2019; Superville, 2 February 2019).
Impeachment of President Bill Clinton (1998)
The case against President Bill Clinton was that he had a scandalous love affair with one-time White House
intern, Monica S. Lewinski. Linda R. Tripp had leaked the secret love affair to independent counsel Kenneth W.
Starr’s office insisting that she had secret tapes of her friend Lewinsky, to testify that Clinton lied to grand jury.
When the report of the case on sexual abuse of Lewinski, filed against President Bill Clinton by Paula Jones,
leaked in September 1998, impeachment process was initiated on 8 October 1998. The grounds of charges
were “high crimes and misdemeanors” which border specifically on lying under oath and obstruction of
justice”.
Based on quadruple-barrel articles of impeachment, the House voted on the first article (grand jury) by 228 to
206; on the second article (perjury), it voted 205 to 229; and on third article (obstruction of justice), it voted
221 to 212; and on the fourth article (abuse of power), the House voted 148 to 284, for and against, thus
5. 44 Asian Journal of Social Science and Management Technology
rejected the vote. By vote-voice and decision, Clinton became the second American president to be
impeached.
The Senate conducted a three-stage trial process (pre-trial, testimony, and verdict) in January 1999 with
presiding Chief Justice William Rehnquist. On the final day, the Senate as authorised in its Order Paper
(Proceedings and Debates) 106 , No. 26, Vol, 145 of Friday , February 12, 1999 12 acquitted Bill Clinton of the
charges which failed to receive mandatory two-thirds majority vote of senators present for the conviction and
removal from office of the U.S. Presidents. Peter Baker and Helen Dewar reported:
The United States acquitted William Jefferson Clinton yesterday on charges that he committed perjury and
obstruction of justice to hide sexual indiscretions with a onetime White House intern, permitting the 42nd
president to complete the remaining 708 days of his term. After a tumultuous year of scandal that tested the
Constitution and tried the nation’s patience, neither of the two articles of impeachment brought by the House
garnered a simple majority, much less the two-thirds necessary to convict Clinton of high crimes and
misdemeanors. Article I alleging perjury was defeated on a 45 to 55 vote at 12:21 p.m. Just 18 minutes later,
Article II charging obstruction failed on a 50 to 50 tie. Five Republicans joined all 45 Democrats in supporting
full acquittal (Baker and Dewar, 13 February 1999, p. A1).
President Clinton on acquittal stated that that he was profoundly sorry for his actions which had brought great
burden on “the Congress and on the American people” and pleaded to rededicate Americans to the work of
serving the country and building the American future together. He added: “This can be and this must be a time
of reconciliation and renewal for America” (Baker and Dewar, 13 February 1999, p. A1).
4. HOUSE IMPEACHMENT OF PRESIDENT TRUMP
The grouse of the Democrats-promoters of impeachment of President Trump, led by Representative Nancy
Pelosi, Speaker, U.S. House of representatives, was anchored on two-horned articles: abuse of power and
obstruction of congress. On “abuse of power”; the Democrats relied on claims of a whistle-blower to front the
allegation that President Trump delayed release of payment of $400, approved by the Congress for military aid
package to President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine, to achieve quid pro quo cooperation to institute a public
inquiry against Democratic Party presidential primary candidate Joe Biden and his son, Hunter Biden.
Democrats also alleged that Russia interfered in the U.S.’s 2016 elections. The Democrats also alleged that a
number of contacts were established between the White House and the government of Ukraine leading to a
25 July 2019 phone call between Trump and Zelensky (Baker and Sullivan, 3 October 2019; Mizette and
Benner, 30 September 2019; Miller et al, 2 October 2019; Savage, 4 October 2019).
On the other horn, was allegation of obstruction of congress, whereby the Democrats pointedly argued that
President Trump obstructed and continued to obstruct congressional investigation into Ukraine’s intervention
in America’s electoral matters.
Democrat Sheila Jackson Lee (Arizona) in a support-vote for the two-horned articles of impeachment
persuasively tried to link the allegations against Trump to abuse of constitution and threat to America’s
national security. In the same vein, Democrat Jamie Raskin (Maryland) pushed forward the viewpoint that
“democracy is the meaning of America” and urged MHRs, “for democracy, for the constitution, for our
country…let us do the right thing and impeach President Trump. The democrats relied their constructed thesis
that the impeachment was a choice to either defend President Trump or defame the American Constitution.
Democrat Joe Neguse (Colorado) defended Democrats’ impeachment articles, stating that President Trump
undermined the “sentry of free and fair elections.”
The Democrats unrelentingly canvassed the view that President Trump by the articles of impeachment acted in
desecration of the U.S. Constitution and the image of America as the temple of democracy as well as become a
threat to America’s national security.
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Republicans reacted that Democrats’ argument for the impeachment of ‘POTUS’ was a ‘bunch-bug’
orchestrated and weaponised in the articles of impeachment and delivered albeit subverting the will of
democracy within U.S. presidential election timeline. The Republicans argued that Democrats and their
cohorts had rehearsed plans to damage the political institutions of American government. The Republicans
proffered that their position was to defend POTUS and the American Constitution. The party accused rival
Democrats of being worse than Pontus Pilate who despite his mindset to subject Jesus Christ to death
nevertheless afforded Jesus opportunity to face his accusers. Republicans bemoaned denial of same
opportunity to President Trump to prove his innocence, insisting that Democrats were pursuing whacky
constitutional theory because President Trump was not Democrats choice ‘President’ Clinton. They lashed
Democrats for demonstrating bipartisanship instead of cooperation to put America first. They concluded that
the process was ‘politically-motivated, sham and shame’ in American political history.
At the Senate, Republican Mitch McConnell, Senate Majority Leader maintained that the Democrats allowed
partisan rage they harboured against Trump to becloud their responsibility to due process in the impeachment
of President Trump. Senator McConnell noted that the process was a “predetermined end of partisan crusade”
which was to find a ‘get-out-the-vote’ gift to the Democrats. Accordingly, McConnell revealed that several
times, the Democrats tried to impeach President Trump based on extra-constitutional reasons, including:
(i) for being impolite to press;
(ii) for being mean to professionalism;
(iii) for changing Obama policies.
At the end of stages of setting the rule of impeachment and debate on the articles of impeachment of Trump
in the HRs, voting exercise was conducted based on the House composition and Democrats majority with 232
member, Republican minority with 197 member, Independent with (one) 1member, and vacant seats for 5
members. The House Representatives are by Apportionment Act of 1911, as amended in The Reapportionment
Act of 1929 (a combination of census and apportionment bill) passed on 18 June 1929, limited the number of
seats in the House to a maximum of 435 voting members and 6 non-voting members. The minimum number
for voting-majority in the House is 218.
Thus, by the voting pattern of the Democrats-majority House of Representatives, President Trump was
impeached by 230 votes in favour to 197 votes against on the first article of impeachment, with only two
Democrats: Jeff Van Drew (New Jersey), who pledged “undying support” to President Trump and was
switching to the Republicans (Edmondson and Haberman. 19 December 2019) and Collin Peterson (Minnesota)
opposition; and on the second article 229-198, with Democrat Jared Golden (Maine) who joined the first two
to make the number three.
Democrat presidential candidate Tulsi Gabbard voted “present” on both charges (The Guardian, 20 December
2019, p. 31). It is interesting to note that Democrat presidential candidate Gabbard’s vote represented neither
sympathy for President Trump nor opposition against his position of the Democrats but a tactical non-
entanglement to safeguard his political chances, the Democrats’ chances and curry support beyond his
Democrats’ supporters but from the Republicans’ in the upcoming U.S. presidential election.
The impeachment votes showed a hyper-partisanship in U.S. House of Representatives, divided into almost
100 per cent Democrats’ “Yes” votes, 100 per cent Republicans’ “No” votes, and less than 1 per cent
Independent’s “ambivalent” votes.
At the conclusion of the impeachment votes, House Speaker Pelosi led the Representatives to the Senate
Chamber and announced suspension to transmit the two articles of impeachment to the Senate, on condition
that the key witnesses to the Trump-Zelensky affair be brought to make additional submissions for fair
hearing. Reacting, the Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, in typical tone of impasse, observed that the
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articles of impeachment fall within ‘executive privileges’ of the president and thus lashed heavily at the
Democrats for not allowing the American justice to run its course. McConnell accused Democrats of partisan
impatience which led them to tie their demands to a “political timetable” rather than act in fairness. The
Senate Leader argued more persuasively that the articles of impeachment were “incompatible” with the
Constitution and the process constitutes the “thinnest and weakest” in U.S. history. He submitted that
impeachment is not only a legal question but also requires political judgment… A political faction in the House
of Representatives has acquiesced to partisan rage…Senate should protect America from the “momentary
hysteria” of a 12-week “rushed and rigged” inquiry which sets the bar of impeachment very low in a 230-year
tradition.
On Wednesday 15 January 2020, the House of Representatives voted 228 in favour and 193 against (Daily
Independence, 17 January 2020, p. 20) and submitted the articles of impeachment to Senate for the trial of
Trump. The House appointed Democrats’ 7-man impeachment prosecution managers (Adam Schiff, 59; Jerry
Nadler, 72; Zoe Lofgren, 72; Hakeem Jeffries, 49; Val Demings, 62; Jaason Crow, 40; and Sylvia Garcia, 40). Mrs
Pelosi, at a press conference, before signing and subsequent submission of the articles of impeachment to the
Senate, said:
Today, we will make history. When the managers walk down the hall, we will cross a
threshold in history – delivering articles of impeachment against the president of the United
States for abuse of power and obstruction of the House (BBC News, 15 January 2020)
The Democrats’ prosecution managers were chaired by Adam Schiff (California), Chairman of the House
Intelligence Committee who worked with the presiding Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts and the 100-
member Senate of Congress as jurors.
5. SENATE TRIAL IN TRUMP’S IMPEACHMENT
The United States’ 116th Senate of Congress is composed of 100 senators, two from each of the 50 states. In
the Senate, the Representatives commands slim majority of 53 senators over the Democrats’ 47 senators and
Independent’s 2 senators.
Constitutionally, to convict the president or any other accused by the U.S. Senate requires the concurrent of
two-thirds of the [Senators] present for at least one article or charge. Where there is no single article on which
a “guilty” vote is cast from two-thirds of the senators present, the defendant is acquitted without any
punishment whatsoever.
Relying on the above provisions regarding the House motion for additional evidence to be heard in the Senate
impeachment trial, the Senate first course of action was to deliberate and vote on the bi-partisan contentious
motion. Arguing against House articles during the impeachment trial, former Harvard Law School Professor
Alan Dershowitz, a member of Trump’s legal counsel corroborated McConnells’ view that House did not reach
the bar of impeachment and removal of President Trump because the charges were “Purely non-criminal
conduct, including abuse of power and obstruction of congress”. Dershowitz premised his disapproval on a
legal tripod:
(i) “The president of the United States should have the power to grant reprieve and pardons for
offences against the United States, except in case of Impeachment.
(ii) The trial of all crimes except in case of impeachment shall be by jury.
(iii) Impeachment trial, in the express word of the constitution requires acquittal or a conviction, a
judgment generally rendered only in the trial of crimes.
The Senate, on the 31st January 2020, after a 4-hour debate on witnesses, the Republicans, in a ‘razor-thin’
majority, voted down a Democratic proposal to admit additional witness and documents on Trump’s
impeachment trial by 51 votes against and 49 votes in favour (Wilkie and Dahanova, 31 January 2020). Out of
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the Republican’s 53 senators, two (Susan Collins of Maine and Mitt Romney of Utah) broke with their party
*Republican+ to join the Democrats’ 45 senators and the Independent’s 2 senators which lead to the 51-49
Republican-Democratic vote-alignments before the Senate adjourned and went for recess to continue ongoing
negotiations between the White House, the Republican senators, and perhaps marginally, the Democrat
senators over the next step of the trial.
On resumption from recess, on Wednesday 5 February 2020, senate voted 52 against and 48 in favour on the
first article of impeachment (abuse of power), with Utah senator Mitt Romney who broke his Republican rank
and voted against Trump. On the second article (obstruction of congress), all 53 Republican senators, including
Romney voted against and all 47 Democrat senators voted in favour. The Democrat-Republican vote-
alignments fell below the mandatory two-thirds of the total 100 senators (at least 67 senators) required to
impeach any American president.
Frustrated by Democrats failure in the Senate trial, House Speaker Pelosi responded:
Trump remains an ongoing threat to American democracy with his insistence that he is
above the law and that he can corrupt the elections if he wants to…Today, the president
and Senate Republicans have normalised lawlessness and rejected the system of checks
and balances of our Constitution (Agence France-Presse, 6 February 2020).
In the coming days, months and years, the simmering effects on national security of America of hyper-
partisanship and acrid division created by Trump’s impeachment saga is no doubt beyond contemplation.
6. EFFECTS OF IMPEACHMENT OF PRESIDENTS ON UNITED STATES’ SECURITY
The impeachment of President Trump, just as any other exercise before it, by the U.S. House of
Representatives revealed more clearly evidence of democracy obsession as a driver of internal conflict and by
extension, threat to U.S. national security. U.S.’ national security goals are anchored on ‘principled realism’:
power, peace, prosperity and principle which verges into American ‘exceptional internationalism’ in the
formulation, spread and defence of templates of democracy across the world. The Trump administration
stated:
An American First National Strategy is based on American principles, a clear-eyed
assessment of U.S. interests, and a determination to tackle the challenges that we face. It
is a strategy of principled realism that is guided by outcomes, not ideology. It is based
upon the view that peace, security, and prosperity depend on strong, sovereign nations
that respect their citizens at home and cooperate to advance peace, and it is grounded in
the realisation that American principles are a lasting force for good in the world (White
House, 2017: 1).
American power-projection serves as instrument to ensure peace for ‘sustained cooperation’, to advance
prosperity through economic incentive or aid, and to strengthen and broaden American principles, values and
ideas such as democracy across the world. For example, among the issues that shape American-African
relationship is the desire to spread western values, ideologies and ideas such as democracy, human right and
rule of law in order to open up trade and security relations. The force-stature behind American democracy
promotion around the globe has attracted criticisms. For example, Amy Chua (2000; 2003) opined that
globalisation and democratisation waves lead to ethnic hatred and violence in countries with market-
dominated minority as well as “does robustly increase ethnic violence in countries without market-dominant
minorities” (Bezemer and Jong-A-Pin, 2008, p. 14).
Nonetheless, from the American worldview, countries that are critical and non-cooperative to Western
democratisation constitute ‘rogue states’ on the axis of evil for sanctions under the guise of ‘humanitarian’
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terrorism. The development marks American democracy obsession which has reached ta point at which
democracy is seen as an end rather than means for human rights, rule of law and inclusive progress.
The above logic promoted support for Executive-Congress cooperation for national stability and development
rather than bipartisan incompatibility, by the Republicans, few Democrats and Trump’s allies, supporters and
sympathisers in the U.S. and across the globe. For instance, Former British Prime Minister Tony Blair being
fielded questions on Brexit by his host, Christiane Maria Amanpour at Cable News Network (CNN) programme,
‘Amanpour’ in the UK, was asked his feelings about the Democrats-Republicans impeachment drama on U.S.
President Trump. With reservation to U.S. ‘internal’ political affairs, Blair stated that if he were in the shoes of
the Democrats, the major issues would be how to secure better future for the Americans. By implication Bair
was asking the Democrats to join hands with the Republicans and Trump to make America greater.
The Russian President Vladmir Putin was no less critical of U.S. Congressional impeachment of Trump.
President Putin, entertaining questions on Climate Change, when asked his views on the impeachment of
President Trump by majority-Democrats of the House of Representatives, criticised Democrats for impeaching
Trump based on “made-up reasons.”
It is instructive to note that America is a country of immigrants from countries and continents across the
world. At the centre of the Congressional impeachment moves against Trump were the immigrants from Asia
(e.g., India, China), Africa (Ghana, Kenya), South America (Brazil, Cuba), etc., who were critical of Trump’s
‘high-handedness’ against the rule of law and who also empathise with their home-states that are under
threats for resisting U.S. hegemonic power, influence and values. The composition of American immigrant
population and the interest they represent can only be moderated along party lines but cannot be divorced
from the hyper-bipartisanship that surrounded Congressional impeachment of Trump, just as part of the
impeachment of Johnson was because he was a Southerner and sympathetic to the Southern cause.
Based on the foregoing, the evident facts in the constitutional logjam orchestrated by bipartisan politics of
impeachment of President Trump are:
(i) Regional politics;
(ii) Executive-Congress incompatibility;
(iii) hyper-bipartisanship;
(iv) Political instability;
(v) Switching of or decamping from parties for political interests; and
(vi) Emphasis on partisan politics rather than development politics.
From Congressional impeachment hindsight, President Trump miffed and scorned at the Democrats: “This
doesn’t feel like impeachment…A cheap in the word ‘impeachment’; it should never happen to any other
president. You have never witnessed zero negative votes by the Republican.” “I am beating everybody by a lot,
and I think that’s where we’re going” (Baker et al, 19 December 2019).
At Trump’s State of the Union Address delivered on Tuesday 4 February 2020 in the chamber of the U.S. House
of Representatives at the Capitol in Washington D. C, a day before Senate vote to conclude the five-month
impeachment saga, Democrats-Republican “acrid atmosphere of partisanship” characterised their reactions. In
BBC Telecast of President Trump’s “pro-growth, pro-family, pro-American” agenda, Trump stated, inter alia:
Jobs are booming, incomes are soaring, poverty is plummeting, crime is falling,
confidence is surging and our country is thriving and highly respected again… the sun is
still rising, that grace is still shining, and my fellow Americans, the best is still to come.
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Speaker Pelosi, who had extended hand to greet Trump while the president turned away to give his speech,
later stood up with Republicans who were clapping for President Trump but instead tore her copy of the
speech in disapproval, which she referred to as “manifesto of mistruths”.
Gretchen Esther Whitmer, 49th governor of Michigan who delivered Democratic Party’s response
acknowledged dangerous: “division of the last few years…Congressional Democrats have presented proposals
to keep us moving forward…But president Trump and Republicans in the Senate…Bullying people on Twitter
doesn’t fix bridges..”. Democratic criticised Trump’s announcement of his achievement titled ‘Great American
Comeback’ as lacking content of climate change and a call for re-election vote. Though Trump reminded
Americans that “…the sun is still rising, grace is still shining, and the best is still to come”, Kevin Liptak painted
the scenario in Democrat perspective:
With the Senate on the verge of an impeachment vote… President Donald Trump used a
theatrical State of the Union Address Tuesday to implore Americans to do the same.
Salted with dramatic surprises and heavy on reelection themes, Trump hoped the
address would prove vindicating in the very same House chamber where he was
impeached late last year [2019]. But the acrid atmosphere of partisanship was
impossible to avoid… (Liptak, 5 February 2020).
Previous impeachment processes showed that despite congressional ‘rule-of-law’ vote-verdict of bipartisan
House of Representatives on the articles of impeachments of Presidents Johnson and Nixon, were immediate
causes but the remote causes of Johnson’s impeachment were that he was seen, against his citizenship rights,
as a Southerner from hitherto seceding Tennessee State, a Democrat, and ‘too soft’ on the South. President
Bill Clinton was impeached by the House of Representatives of perjury and obstruction of justice to hide sexual
indiscretions with a one-time White House intern but was acquitted by the Senate bipartisan majority vote-
verdict.
It can, therefore, be poignantly argued that the impeachment of President Johnson and President Clinton by
the Republicans-majority as well as President Nixon and President Trump by the Democrats-majority in the
House of Representatives make no novelty of the traditional bipartisanship guiding Congressional
impeachment process of U.S. presidents. Although the Senate had always acquitted the embattled
presidents, except Nixon, who resigned before the voting process could commence, impeachment process of
U.S. presidents has built up hyper-partisanship in the Congress, government and the state, created cleavages,
a sense of political instability and stultifies development policies and programmes based on bipartisanship.
In comparative term, U.S. Senate acquittal of Clinton was not more convincing than Trump’s. it must be
recalled that Clinton after the acquittal apologised for the trouble he put the Congress and things were quickly
patched up for the U.S. to return to greatness and winning ways in the comity of nations. That Democrats-
Republicans post-impeachment understanding and cooperation suddenly became lacking in the Trump’s case.
It is un-American for Congress that was enviably, politically united in strengthening presidential power during
the 2018 Trump-Kim Denuclarisation of the Korean Peninsula to have degenerated into such hyper-
partisanship, notorious, politically disunited class against presidential power to the level of denigrating the
power as a wimp factor and reason the president of America cannot successfully authorize Indian government
to lift ban on hydroxyl-chloroquin to supply to the U.S. in the fight against COVID-19. At no time in the history
of U.S. Superpower status, not even the Clinton impeachment saga that could bring U.S. power so close to
precipice as witnessed in the Trump post-impeachment hyper-bipartisan politics of COVID-19 and other U.S.
policies, programmes and projects.
Analysts are wont to accept Putin’s “made-up reasons” perspective in the impeachment of Trump, given that
the allegation of Trump-Zelensky quid-pro-quo was a classical case of arm-twisting for investigation of the
Bidens. It is truism that aid-giving and withdrawal fall within the traditional presidential prerogatives although
11. 50 Asian Journal of Social Science and Management Technology
the Congress can approve the ceiling. It was no wonder Trump, on 20 December 2017, in pursuit of U.S.
national security interests declared: “All of these nations that take our money and then they vote against us at
the Security Council or they vote against us ... at the Assembly ... Well, we’re watching those votes. Let them
vote against us; we’ll save a lot” (Landler, 2017).
Analysing the articles for the impeachment of U.S. presidents, Jason Silverstein, argued that they deliberately
skewed on familiar reasons of “lie”, “obstruction”, abusing power”, and “defying congress” to fall within
Congress’ meaning of “High Crimes and Misdemeanors” within the constitutional ambit of “Treason, Bribery
and other High Crimes and Misdemeanors” for impeaching presidents and other federal officials in the United
States (Silverstein, 19 November 2019).
The seemingly100 percentile votes by Democrats and Republicans who are sharply divided on the articles of
democratic impeachment of President Trump illustrated how Americans are ideologically deeply fragmented
along iron-curtain party and petty lines which is sustained by hyper-partisanship and by extension, constitutes
internal threat to political elections, policy and national security in the U.S. the present political crisis
recreates the view canvassed by Susan Strange in her book, The Westfailure System, published posthumously
in 1999, contending that ‘“Westphalia’ is ‘Westfailure’” (Strange, 1999, p. ). The legacy of peace of Westphalia,
among others, was the entrenchment of democratic system in the political order in the world via Europe
(Hoeksma, 3 January 2014).
7. Concluding Remarks
The study of America as the temple of Western democracy in relation to U.S. national security goals through
globalisation and its structures and institutions has ripped open the deep sore of “political” cleavages which
divide political parties into voting blocs of advocates and adversaries, or supporters and opponents. This sore
political development has provided more opportunities for external interferences, however subtle. The
discovery of deep-seated anger and rage which characterised the hyper-bipartisan impeachment processes
explains how Americans’ connection to political party trumps other social identifiers like gender, race, religion,
language and ethnicity (Martinovich, 31 August 2017).
The U.S. model of democracy presents a nervy obsession for self-destruction. These events demonstrate that
the U.S. is not immune to internal threats to national security but indeed is at the threshold of ‘tipping point’
of Westfailure.
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INFO:-
Corresponding Author: Onyemaechi Augustine Eke, Department of International Relations, Gregory
University, Uturu, Abia State, Nigeria.
How to cite this article: Onyemaechi Augustine Eke, American National Security and Impeachment of
Presidents: Westfailure in the ‘Temple of Democracy’, Asian. Jour. Social. Scie. Mgmt. Tech. 2(3): 40-52,
2020.