An early effort to impeach Bush was begun by
Lyndon Johnson administration Attorney General
Ramsey Clark.
Democrats in Congress On June 16, 2005, Rep.
John Conyers (D-
MI) assembled an unofficial meeting to discuss the
Downing Street memo and to consider grounds for impeachment. Conyers filed a resolution on December 18, 2005, to create an investigative committee to consider impeachment. His resolution gained 38 co-sponsors before it expired at the end of the
109th Congress. He did not reintroduce a similar resolution for the
110th Congress.
Keith Ellison (D-MN) was the leading figure behind the resolution to impeach Bush brought to the
Minnesota State House of Representatives in May 2006. Ellison was elected to the
United States House of Representatives in November 2006. During the campaign and when he was named to the
House Judiciary Committee, Ellison repeatedly called for an investigation into a possible impeachment. In support of his candidacy, he "received a $1,000 contribution from ImpeachPAC". Ellison would later note that his "opinions really have not changed over time, but the circumstances" regarding his position in Congress had, and he was a "step before impeachment". At another
unofficial hearing convened by Conyers on January 20, 2006, Rep.
Jerrold Nadler (D-
NY) called for the committee to explore whether Bush should face impeachment, stemming from his decision to authorize domestic surveillance without court review. On May 10, 2006, House Minority Leader
Nancy Pelosi (D-
CA) indicated she was not interested in pursuing impeachment and had taken it "off the table", reiterating this phrase on November 8, 2006, after the election. In July 2007, Pelosi stated that she "would probably advocate" impeaching Bush if she were not in the House nor Speaker of the House. On December 8, 2006 (the last day of the 109th Congress), then-Representative
Cynthia McKinney (D-GA) submitted a resolution, H. Res. 1106. The bill expired along with the 109th Congress. John Conyers brought up the subject of impeachment on the July 8, 2007, broadcast of
This Week with George Stephanopoulos, stating: We're hoping that as the cries for the removal of both Cheney and Bush now reach 46 percent and 58 percent, respectively, for impeachment, that we could begin to become a little bit more cooperative, if not even amicable, in trying to get to the truth of these matters. Presidential candidate
Dennis Kucinich's major point in the
Democratic Presidential Debate on October 30, 2007, was that Bush and Cheney should be impeached for the
Iraq War. On November 6, 2007, Kucinich introduced a
resolution to impeach Vice President Cheney in the House of Representatives. In November 2007,
Joe Biden, then a candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination in 2008, stated that he would move to impeach if President Bush were to bomb Iran without first gaining congressional approval. However, no such bombing occurred during the rest of Bush's term. On June 9, 2008, Representative
Dennis Kucinich (D-Ohio), introduced a resolution, , to impeach president George W. Bush, which included 35 counts in the articles of impeachment. At the end of the evening on June 10, Kucinich offered a motion to refer HRes 1258 to the House Judiciary Committee. On June 11, the House voted 251–166 to send the resolution to the committee. The effort to impeach President Bush was not supported by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who believed the move would be "divisive and unlikely to succeed." On July 14, 2008, Kucinich introduced a new impeachment resolution () limited to a single count.
State-level Democratic party actions On March 21, 2006, the New Mexico Democratic Party, at a convention in
Albuquerque, adopted a plank to their platform saying “the Democratic Party of New Mexico supports the impeachment of George Bush and his lawful removal from office.” On March 24, 2007, the Vermont Democratic State Committee voted to support JRH 15, a state legislative resolution supporting impeachment, calling for its passage as "appropriate action." On January 2, 2008,
Betty Hall, an 87-year-old, fourteen-term Democratic
State Representative, introduced New Hampshire House Resolution 24 in the State-Federal Relations and Veterans Affairs Committee of the
New Hampshire House of Representatives. The resolution was "petitioning Congress to commence impeachment procedures" against Bush and Cheney for "high crimes and misdemeanors", including domestic spying, illegal detentions, signing statements, electioneering, the breaking of international treaties, and war crimes. The bill further asserted that "section 603 of
Jefferson's Manual of Parliamentary Practice states that an impeachment may be set in motion by the United States House of Representatives by charges transmitted from the legislature of a state". ==Municipal and county resolutions endorsing impeachment==