Are there notable other partners who got busted off the program only to return at a later date, and if so, what's the safe harbor time frame to assume this one will not be another case of temporary removal?
Amber Reid does this for sometimes entire months of her youtube channel to feed her 600 elbee lifestyle. Phil can't figure out what a fat millennial southern redneck can but will still claim he's doing nothing wrong instead of using this option and reapplying for partner with Twitch in three to six months, much less 25 hours from now because he's just that useless to Kat.Monetizing his YT videos/VODs, no, plenty of other streamers do that. And while I may be wrong, as far as I know there are only two rules that apply to affiliates and partners about being on multiple services.
1. You cannot stream your content on other sites or simulcast to other sites. When you sign with Twitch, you stream on only their platform.
2. There is a timed-exclusivity rule where whatever you stream on Twitch can only be watched on their platform for the first (I think it's) 24 hours. You can put it up to watch on Youtube; but you're breaking the rules of the agreement if you put it up before then, and this is just on way Phil has broken their rules.
The sad part is, when he's babysitting his YouTube uploads and putting all the data in; the last page to configure your video is a "When to make the video available" option. You can schedule videos to go live at least a couple months in advance IIRC, and even set it down to the hour and 15min intervals. All Phil would have to do is instead of clicking the "Public" option which means go live as soon as it uploads, he'd have to do some simple math and determine when to make the videos go live.