(Photo : Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images) U.S. President Donald Trump walks up to speak about Operation Warp Speed in the Rose Garden at the White House on November 13, 2020 in Washington, DC.
The House of Representatives has voted on Wednesday afternoon to get President Donald Trump impeached for the second time around for incitement of insurrection.
There were 232 House lawmakers in favor of having Trump impeached while 197 lawmakers objected to the move.
Of all the lawmakers who agreed to have Trump impeached, 10 were members of the Republican Party, reported Fox News.
On January 6, a crowd of Trump supporters stormed the U.S. Capitol in an attempt to stop the certification of electoral votes for President-elect Joe Biden.
Marjorie Taylor Greene Known to Support Far-Right QAnon Conspiracy Theory
Newsweek noted that Greene had been a public supporter of the conspiracy theories from QAnon and a strong Trump ally.
These theories are based on unfounded claims of a deep state involving influential people such as political business leaders working against Trump.
Supporters of the QAnon believe that Trump is the leader of a secret war against a group of pedophilic human-traffickers.
Greene won her House seat in Georgia s 14th Congressional District in November and has since distanced herself from the conspiracy, noted a report from The Sun.
Marjorie Taylor Greene Accuses Biden of Being Bought Off by Foreign Governments
The Peace Monument stands in front of the U.S. Capitol on January 12, 2021 in Washington, DC.
A second impeachment is awaiting President Donald Trump on Wednesday as House Democrats move forward on their plan to oust the president.
They said Trump deserves a second impeachment for encouraging a violent mob of supporters, who stormed the U.S. Capitol on Wednesday.
As this is his second impeachment, he would be the first American president to face impeachment twice in the nation s history. Aside from Trump, two other presidents have already been impeached but were never convicted.
Previous impeachments were of Presidents Andrew Johnson and Bill Clinton. These earlier impeachments took months to arrive at a final vote, as investigations and hearings were held.