Trump is not currently being impeached in the formal, constitutional sense, but multiple impeachment resolutions have been introduced and pushed by some Democrats, and there is an active political push to “impeach Trump again.” So the buzz you’re seeing is about efforts and proposals, not an impeachment that has actually been passed by the House.

Quick scoop: what’s really happening?

  • Several House Democrats have filed or announced articles of impeachment against President Trump in the current Congress.
  • These resolutions accuse him of things like abuse of power, incitement of violence, unconstitutional use of military force, and other “high crimes and misdemeanors.”
  • However, the House has not successfully voted to impeach him in this term, and with Republicans holding the majority, analysts consider any near‑term impeachment removal highly unlikely.

Key moves in Congress

  • Rep. Al Green (D‑TX) has publicly said he is “moving to bring impeachment again” and pledged to file articles of impeachment before the Christmas recess.
  • Advocacy groups like “Impeach Trump Again” highlight that Rep. Green filed a resolution (H.Res.939) accusing Trump of abuse of power and incitement of violence.
  • Other resolutions, such as H.Res.353 and H.Res.537, lay out multi‑article impeachment cases against Trump, covering obstruction of justice, abuse of war powers, and other alleged violations.

Why everyone online says “he’s being impeached”

  • Headlines and forum posts often blur the line between “impeachment resolutions introduced” and “the president has been impeached,” even though only a successful House vote actually impeaches a president.
  • Because Trump has already been impeached twice in his first term, talk of a “third impeachment” sounds plausible and goes viral easily, especially when paired with activist campaigns and petitions.
  • There was even a viral episode where Trump reposted an account calling to “impeach Trump a 3rd time,” which fed memes and speculation about another impeachment push.

What this means right now

  • Legally: Trump remains in office; no new impeachment has been approved by the full House in this term.
  • Politically: Impeachment is still being used as a pressure tool and rallying cry by opponents, and new articles keep the issue alive for media and activists.
  • Practically: With the current House makeup, these efforts are seen as long‑shots that are more symbolic than likely to remove him from office.

TL;DR: Claims that “Trump is being impeached” mix together formal resolutions, activist campaigns, and online hype. Impeachment is being pursued on paper, but it has not actually happened again in this term.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.