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Lawmakers Are Calling for Trump's Removal Using the 25th Amendment — Here Is Why It Won't Happen
Several Democratic lawmakers are calling for Trump's removal via the 25th Amendment over his Iran war social media posts. Here is what the 25th Amendment actually requires and why this won't succeed.
Several Democratic lawmakers are calling for Trump's removal via the 25th Amendment over his Iran war social media posts. Here is what the 25th Amendment actually requires and why this won't succeed.
- Several Democratic lawmakers are calling for Trump's removal via the 25th Amendment over his Iran war social media posts.
- On Easter Sunday April 5, 2026, President Trump posted a profane message on Truth Social threatening to bomb all of Iran's bridges and power plants.
- Democratic lawmakers — whose specific list of named representatives spans the progressive wing of the party — responded by publicly calling for Trump's removal using the 25th Amendment, the specific constitutional mechan...
Several Democratic lawmakers are calling for Trump's removal via the 25th Amendment over his Iran war social media posts.
The Social Media Posts That Prompted the Calls
On Easter Sunday April 5, 2026, President Trump posted a profane message on Truth Social threatening to bomb all of Iran's bridges and power plants. The specific language — including explicit profanity and a closing religious invocation — was the particular combination of threats, expletives, and religious references that Fox News Live described as prompting calls for the 25th Amendment's invocation. Trump followed it with additional posts on April 7 stating that "a whole civilization will die tonight, never to be brought back again."
Democratic lawmakers — whose specific list of named representatives spans the progressive wing of the party — responded by publicly calling for Trump's removal using the 25th Amendment, the specific constitutional mechanism whose Section 4 allows the Vice President and a majority of Cabinet members to declare the President "unable to discharge the powers and duties of his office" and transmit that declaration to Congress.
The specific legal question those lawmakers were raising is whether the conduct — threatening to destroy civilian infrastructure that serves 92 million people, making those threats in expletive-laden social media posts, and framing the specific destruction of an entire country's power grid as a desirable outcome — constitutes evidence of the particular inability to discharge presidential duties that the 25th Amendment addresses.
The immediate political reality is unambiguous: this will not happen. But understanding why it won't happen is as important as understanding what it says about the specific constitutional moment the United States is occupying.
What the 25th Amendment Actually Requires
The 25th Amendment's Section 4 — the specific provision whose invocation would remove a sitting president — requires a written declaration from the Vice President and a majority of principal officers of the executive departments (the Cabinet) to Congress stating that the President is unable to perform his duties. Once that declaration is made, the Vice President immediately becomes Acting President.
The President can then submit a written declaration to Congress stating that he is not unable to discharge his duties, at which point the Vice President and Cabinet can respond within four days with their own declaration confirming the President's incapacity. Congress must then convene within 48 hours and decide the matter within 21 days by a two-thirds vote in both chambers.
Even setting aside the political impossibility — JD Vance is not going to invoke Section 4 against a president whose specific policies he has been executing as Vice President, and the Trump Cabinet is not going to declare him incapacitated — the specific legal question of whether threatening to bomb civilian infrastructure constitutes inability to discharge presidential duties is not how the provision was designed to function. The specific intent of Section 4 involves physical or mental incapacitation that prevents decision-making, not decisions whose specific content legislators disagree with however strongly.
The specific historical uses of the 25th Amendment's active provisions have involved precisely this kind of temporary incapacitation: Ronald Reagan's colon surgery in 1985, George W. Bush's colonoscopies in 2002 and 2007. The specific political circumstances of Trump's presidency have prompted calls for 25th Amendment invocation since his first term, and none of those calls has produced action for the same structural reasons: the process requires the cooperation of people who were specifically selected for their alignment with the President they would be removing.
What the Calls Actually Accomplish
The specific value of Democratic lawmakers calling for 25th Amendment invocation is not the expectation of success — it is the particular creation of a public record whose specific documentation has political and potentially legal value at future points in American history.
When members of Congress publicly state, on the record, with specific reference to specific statements and specific dates, that a sitting President's conduct was disqualifying, they are contributing to the particular historical accounting that the specific era of American governance will require. The specific statements become part of the Congressional Record, the particular news reports in which they appear become part of the media archive, and the specific constitutional argument they assert becomes part of the legal scholarship that future constitutional scholars will engage with.
The specific accountability dimension of these calls — even when they produce no immediate action — functions as the particular constraint on presidential behavior that public documentation creates: the knowledge that specific actions are being specifically noted and specifically characterized as disqualifying, by people with the specific authority to make that characterization officially, is the particular form of accountability that functions even when enforcement mechanisms fail.
For the specific Iran war context: the particular calls for Trump's removal over his specific war communications are part of the broader international accountability record that European Council President António Costa's specific statement about international law, Kenneth Roth's specific war crimes characterization, and the specific human rights organizations' specific documentation collectively create. The arc of that accountability is long; the creation of specific records at specific moments is the particular work whose importance the specific outcome of any single political action doesn't determine.