In face of Trump's COVID-19 case, Democrats seek to set up commission on
incapacitated presidents
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[October 10, 2020]
By Richard Cowan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - One week after
Republican President Donald Trump announced he had COVID-19, Democrats
in Congress on Friday proposed creating a commission to help decide
whether to transfer a future U.S. president's powers when incapacitated.
The Democrats, in the U.S. House of Representatives, said their
legislation would activate a long-ignored provision of the 25th
Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, ratified in 1967, empowering
Congress to create such a commission.
Democratic Representative Jamie Raskin, the bill's sponsor, said the
17-member commission would be made up of eight medical personnel, eight
former executive-branch officials and a 17th member chosen by the group.
"What happens if a president, any president, ends up in a coma or on a
ventilator and has made no provisions for the temporary transfer of
power," Raskin said in urging that Congress pass his legislation next
year.
House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi, a Democrat, was quick to
say "this is not about President Trump," but about future presidents,
which could include Trump if he wins a second four-year term in a Nov. 3
election.
Pelosi has raised experts' concerns that some of the drugs Trump took to
battle his COVID-19 symptoms could cloud a person's judgment.
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One week after Republican President Donald Trump announced he had
COVID-19, Democrats in Congress on Friday proposed creating a
commission to help decide whether to transfer a future U.S.
president's powers when incapacitated.
The 25th Amendment, sparked by the 1963 assassination of President
John Kennedy, establishes the transfer of presidential power if a
president or vice president dies or is incapacitated.
The Democratic legislation seeks to provide more clarity on the
triggers for transferring power from the elected president or vice
president to a temporary or permanent replacement.
House Minority Whip Steve Scalise, a Republican, accused Pelosi of
trying to undo the results of the 2016 election, having failed to do
so with the House impeachment of Trump that ended with a Senate
acquittal.
"Here she is again ... trying to overturn the results of next
month's election," Scalise told Fox News.
(Reporting by Richard Cowan; Editing by Howard Goller)
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