Via NY Times Here by David
Leonhardt
During Watergate, the House Judiciary Committee considered five articles of impeachment against Richard Nixon — and voted down two of them. During the impeachment of Bill Clinton, the House voted on four articles — and rejected two.
So
last week I posed a question to legal experts: If the House were going
to forget about political tactics and impeach Trump strictly on the
merits, how many articles of impeachment would there be?
I think the answer is eight — eight thematic areas, most of which include more than one violation.
In
making the list, I erred on the side of conservatism. I excluded gray
areas from the Mueller report, like the Trump campaign’s flirtation with
Russian operatives. I also excluded all areas of policy, even the
forcible separation of children from their parents, and odious personal
behavior, like Trump’s racism, that doesn’t violate the Constitution.
Yet
the list is still extensive, which underscores Trump’s thorough
unfitness for the presidency. He rejects the basic ideals of American
government, and he is damaging the national interest, at home and
abroad. Here’s the list:
1. Obstruction of justice.
Both
the Nixon and Clinton articles included the phrase “prevented,
obstructed, and impeded the administration of justice,” and Trump’s
impeachment should start with his pattern of obstructing investigations.
He has admitted that he fired the F.B.I. director to influence the investigation of his own campaign. He has harassed
Justice Department officials who are Russia experts, including Andrew
McCabe and Bruce Ohr. Trump also directed his White House counsel to lie
about their conversations over whether to fire Robert Mueller. Most
recently, the White House tried to hide evidence about Trump’s phone
call with Ukraine’s president, by improperly classifying material about it.
2. Contempt of Congress.
Another
article of impeachment against Nixon said that he had “failed without
lawful cause” to cooperate with a congressional investigation. Trump has
gone much further than Nixon, outright refusing
to participate in the constitutionally prescribed impeachment process.
As a result, the country still doesn’t know the full truth of the
Ukraine scandal.
3. Abuse of power.
The
House will almost certainly adopt a version of this article, impeaching
Trump for turning American foreign policy into a grubby
opposition-research division of his campaign.
The most haunting part is that if a courageous whistle-blower
hadn’t come forward, Trump most likely would have gotten away with it.
He would have pressured the Ukrainian government to announce an
investigation of the Bidens, and we in the media would have played
along, producing the headlines that Trump wanted to see.
4. Impairing the administration of justice.
That
phrase appears in the second impeachment article against Nixon, which
detailed his efforts to use the I.R.S., F.B.I. and others to hound his
opponents. It’s a version of abuse of power — but distinct from the
previous item because it involves using the direct investigatory powers
of the federal government.
Trump has
repeatedly called for investigations against his political opponents,
both in public and in private with aides. For example, as the Mueller report
documented, he pressured Jeff Sessions, then the attorney general, to
investigate Hillary Clinton: “You’d be a hero,” Trump said. This
behavior has violated the constitutional rights of American citizens and
undermined the credibility of the judicial system.
5. Acceptance of emoluments.
The
Constitution forbids the president from profiting off the office by
accepting “emoluments.” Yet Trump continues to own his hotels, allowing
politicians, lobbyists and foreigners to enrich him and curry favor with him by staying there. On Sunday, William Barr, the attorney general, personally paid for a 200-person holiday party at Trump’s hotel in downtown Washington.
The
Democratic-controlled House has done an especially poor job of calling
attention to this corruption. It hasn’t even conducted good oversight
hearings — a failure that, as Bob Bauer, an N.Y.U. law professor and
former White House counsel, told me, “is just astonishing.”
6. Corruption of elections.
Very few campaign-finance violations are impeachable. But $280,000
in undisclosed hush-money payments during a campaign’s final weeks
isn’t a normal campaign-finance violation. The 2016 election was close
enough — decided by fewer than 80,000 votes across three swing states — that the silence those payments bought may well have flipped the outcome.
7. Abuse of pardons.
The
president has wide latitude to issue pardons. But Trump has done
something different: He has encouraged people to break the law (or
impede investigations) with a promise of future pardons.
And
he didn’t do it only during the Russia investigation. He also
reportedly told federal officials to ignore the law and seize private
land for his border wall, waving away their worries with pardon promises.
8. Conduct grossly incompatible with the presidency.
This
is the broadest item on the list, and I understand if some people are
more comfortable with the narrower ones. But the “grossly incompatible”
phrase comes from a 1974 House Judiciary Committee report justifying
impeachment. It also captures Trump’s subversion of the presidency.
He lies constantly,
eroding the credibility of the office. He tries to undermine any
independent information that he does not like, which weakens our system
of checks and balances. He once went so far as to say that federal
law-enforcement agents and prosecutors regularly fabricated evidence — a
claim that damages the credibility of every criminal investigation.
You
may have forgotten about that particular violation of his oath of
office, because Trump commits so many of them. Which is all the more
reason to make an effort to hold him accountable.
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