At Free Speech For People, we are continuing to document the multiple abuses of power that Donald Trump has committed for which he must be impeached and removed from public office. We normalize his abuses of power when we do not name them for what they are: High Crimes against the State. We have now identified 25 grounds for impeachment at our campaign site: www.impeachtrumpagain.org. Today, we made two important updates to those grounds.

First, for Ground 5: Unconstitutionally and systemically violating the First Amendment, we have added Trump’s executive order yesterday designating “Antifa” a terrorist organization, despite the fact that experts have defined antifa as being an anti-fascist, anti-white supremacy ideology, movement, or subculture and not an organization—it has no leader, centralized structure, membership, headquarters, and it has never been connected to a terrorist attack in the United States. Trump’s order requires and authorizes federal law enforcement and other agencies to target anyone they brand as being “antifa,” being associated with “antifa,” or who provide funds to people or organizations who ascribe to the “antifa” ideology. Trump is abusing the terrorist organization designation in order to carry out unconstitutional investigations and prosecutions of people based on their personal ideologies, speech, and association, and to target his political and ideological opponents.

And, second, for Ground 9: Abusing investigatory and prosecutorial powers, we have added Trump’s actions over the past several days in which he has fired a federal prosecutor who refused to prosecute two of Trump’s political adversaries, New York Attorney General Letitia James and former FBI director James B. Comey, announced his plans to nominate a member of his personal legal team (who has no experience as a prosecutor) to the role, and publicly ordered his attorney general to prosecute James, Comey, and Senator Adam Schiff.

Any one of these 25 grounds on our campaign site can serve as the basis for articles of impeachment. Any Member of the House can introduce such articles and, under House Rule IX, can force a floor vote. Members of Congress took the same oath that Donald Trump took — to protect and defend the Constitution. They have a sworn duty to abide by that oath and to invoke the very constitutional remedy which the Framers created to address a lawless president: the Impeachment Cause, Article II, Section 4.