What the 25th Amendment Does (And Why 85+ Lawmakers Are Calling for It Right Now)
The constitutional text, the procedural steps, and how to make your voice heard
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We need to talk about the 25th Amendment. The constitutional text, the procedural steps it requires, and what it would realistically take to invoke it. Because right now, more than 85 members of Congress are publicly calling for it.
On Easter Sunday, Trump posted to Truth Social threatening “Hell” for Iran.
By Tuesday morning he declared that “a whole civilization will die tonight” unless Iran met his demands before an 8 p.m. deadline.
Within hours, calls for Trump’s removal were coming from across the political spectrum.
More than 85 House Democrats, along with two Democratic senators, had publicly called for impeachment, the 25th Amendment, or both.
-Former Trump ally Marjorie Taylor Greene also publicly raised the 25th Amendment.
-Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez said the president had “threatened a genocide against the Iranian people.”
-Sen. Ed Markey said the House must impeach, the Senate must convict and remove, or the cabinet and vice president, with congressional concurrence, must invoke the 25th Amendment and remove Trump.
-Rep. Ro Khanna called for removal directly.
-Rep. John Larson filed articles of impeachment.
-Rep. Yassamin Ansari, the first Iranian American Democrat in Congress, said the 25th Amendment exists for a reason and that Trump’s cabinet should use it.
-Former Speaker Nancy Pelosi said if the cabinet will not act, Republicans must reconvene Congress and end the war themselves.
By Wednesday, House Democratic leadership had signaled greater openness to the issue, with Minority Leader Jeffries announcing a virtual briefing led by Rep. Jamie Raskin and House Judiciary Democrats on Trump administration accountability and the 25th Amendment.
What Section 4 of the 25th Amendment says.
Section 4 is the provision at issue.
Here’s how it works, step by step.
The process can’t be started by Congress.
It begins when the vice president and a majority of the principal officers of the executive departments transmit a written declaration to the president pro tempore of the Senate and the Speaker of the House stating that the president is unable to discharge the powers and duties of his office.
Those “principal officers” are generally understood to mean the heads of the executive departments, the cabinet secretaries, unless Congress creates another body by law. The moment that declaration is transmitted, the vice president becomes Acting President.
If the president sends his own written declaration contesting the finding, he resumes his powers unless the vice president and a majority of the cabinet send a second written declaration within four days stating that the president remains unable to serve. Only then does Congress take over.
At that point, Congress must assemble within 48 hours if it’s not in session. It then has 21 days to resolve the dispute.
A two-thirds vote in both the House and the Senate is required to keep the vice president serving as Acting President. Without that supermajority, the president resumes power permanently.
This is why “only call the cabinet, skip Congress” is constitutionally incomplete. Congress can’t initiate Section 4. But Congress holds the final vote if the president contests the declaration.
The 25th Amendment has been used before. Section 3, which allows a president to voluntarily transfer power during a medical procedure, has been invoked several times. Section 4, removal against a president’s will, has never once been successfully used.
Why this moment is different from prior 25th Amendment talk.
Section 4 has never been invoked. The bar requires people closest to this president, his own cabinet and his own vice president, to sign a written declaration that he can’t perform the duties of his office. There’s no indication JD Vance is prepared to do that.
But… the political calculation is shifting.
Axios reported Wednesday that Democratic leadership is responding more quickly to pressure from rank-and-file members than it did a year ago. Congressional Democrats largely considered long-shot options like this off the table twelve months ago. That position is no longer holding.
Rep. Sarah McBride made a pointed argument about where Republican responsibility fits into this: “We have to beat the drum that GOP members have the power to stop this. There are several ways. They need to choose one, but they could act now.”
How to use official channels to make your position known.
To reach the vice president, use the White House contact form, which includes a direct option to contact the vice president.
For cabinet members, the USAGov agency index lists official contact pages for every federal department and agency.
Keep contacting your members of Congress as well. They can’t initiate this process, but under Section 4 they would cast the deciding votes if the president contested a removal declaration.
All three points of pressure are constitutionally relevant.
As of April 9, more than 85 House Democrats and two Democratic senators had publicly called for impeachment, the 25th Amendment, or both because they believe this president’s conduct has moved from reckless into a direct threat to human life. The constitutional text exists and the procedural steps are clear. The bar is extraordinarily high, and it has never been cleared. But understanding what the process requires is the first step toward applying pressure to the people who hold the authority to act.
Do you think the 25th Amendment is a realistic constitutional path, or is this primarily about forcing a public record? What would it take, in your view, for even one cabinet member to break ranks?




If the millions of people protesting around America and the world can't get the message across to the Republican Congress, then I don't know what can. The Republicans aren't listening and/or they are too afraid to care. Why they are holding out is beyond our beliefs. It's Beyond ridiculous
All of that will take too long. We need a general strike now! And make it clear that we won’t end it until he’s out of power.