Should President Clinton Be Removed From Office? No.
This week marks the beginning of what should be the most solemn event of the century. For the first time in a hundred and thirty years, the President of the United States will face removal from office as the Senate tries him. A solemn occasion in principle but in reality a charade that ranks with professional wrestling in its seriousness. With only 55 Senate seats, the Republicans have literally no chance of succeeding in "Impeachamania '99." Yet, despite the protests of the public, the press and even those posed by common sense, the GOP insists on embarking on what promises to be one of the most entertaining suicide missions in the nation's long history.