stand because edwin stanton was in the cabinet because of abraham lincoln, not because johnson put them put him there. and so one interpretation, the statute is it doesn't constrain a different president from removing somebody who had been appointed by else. then they finally get the other argument, which is that johnson, having not committed a crime and johnson having perhaps acted in accordance with the statute, is therefore really somebody who had a policy difference with the republicans in congress. republicans congress wanted to put together a very robust reconstruction. johnson stood in the way of that that's politically going on and and so johnson is not ultimately removed for his obstruction of reconstruction. the last ten months of his administration. he's very tame he's like almost non present, very timid. and if you knew andrew johnson, but not really timidity is not really, you know, how you describe him but he got the message and he sort of just keeps his head down, rides out. the presidency. and now we left to make sense of that. yeah. so for the next hundred years, no ser