By Kevin D. Williamson
Wednesday, December 03, 2025
The Trump administration’s campaign of mass murder in the
Caribbean should draw our attention to the president’s pardon powers, for two
reasons.
The first and easiest one is the matter of hypocrisy or
what we might call, more precisely, revealed priorities. The president says his
campaign of simply murdering ships full of people that he claims are probably
smugglers is part of an antidrug project. There are several problems with that:
One is that it asks us to take at their words such men as Donald Trump, J.D.
Vance, and Pete Hegseth, a collection of habitual liars who embrace
politically convenient dishonesty as a kind of virtue; another is that the
president frequently cites fentanyl deaths while murdering citizens of
Venezuela, which
produces no fentanyl; another is that it is not clear that these boats are
involved in any kind of illegal activity at all or that, if they are, this
activity involves the United States in any way, inasmuch as many of these boats
do not seem to have been U.S.-bound. Yet another problem is the relevant fact, cited
by my friend Andy McCarthy, himself a prominent former federal prosecutor of
high-profile terrorism cases, that U.S. law does not provide for summary
execution of drug suspects or classify drug smuggling as an act of war. Closing
out the list is the fact that the president has just used his pardon power to
liberate the former president of Honduras, Juan Orlando Hernández, one of the
most significant drug smugglers of our time, who was convicted of bringing some
500
tons of cocaine into the United States. Hernández is a political ally of
the Trump administration, one who presents himself as a bulwark against the “radical
left.”
So, there’s the revealed preference: 500 tons of cocaine
is nothing if you are a Trump ally; imaginary fentanyl is a death sentence if
you are a seafaring Venezuelan who can be blown to bits for the sake of
political theater.
Trump’s cynical abuse of the pardon power to reward
allies or simply to enrich
himself and his family is obviously corrupt, which is hardly news. But as
Lord Acton knew, absolute power does not corrupt only those who wield it: It
“corrupts absolutely” those who are adjacent to it, who are servants of that
power. It is difficult to imagine that figures such as Pete Hegseth would be
doing what they are doing—“at best, a war crime,” McCarthy writes, but more
properly regarded as plain murder “under circumstances in which the boat
operators pose no military threat to the United States, and given that narcotics
trafficking is defined in federal law as a crime rather than as terrorist
activity, much less an act of war”—without the promise of a pardon should it
come to that. Thanks to Chief Justice John Roberts, President Trump has reason
to believe that he is acting with a legal “immunity” found nowhere in the text
of the Constitution or U.S. law, and figures such as Hegseth—appreciating the
precedent of the January 6 rioters and others involved in the attempted coup
d’etat of 2021—may be confident that they can break the law in the service
of Donald Trump’s homicidal whimsy without facing legal consequences short of
being extradited to a face trial abroad.
Congress lately cannot manage to perform even its most
basic functions, and so this is not exactly a ripe time for a constitutional
amendment. But we should begin the work of converting the president’s
unilateral pardon power into something less corrupting, for example by
requiring that pardons be ratified by a two-thirds majority vote in the
Senate—even a simple majority would be an improvement.
Trump once joked that he could simply murder strangers in
public and pay no political price from his supporters, and he has decided to
test that proposition on the seas rather than on Fifth Avenue. The United
States is not a party to the Rome Statute and does not recognize the authority
of the war crime tribunal in the Hague over Americans. It would be less than
perfectly desirable to see Hegseth extradited to Venezuela for trial on war
crimes, enticing as the idea might be.
I have written for years that the matter of moral
character in public officials is not only a question of metaphysical
niceties—investing power in the hands of such men as Donald Trump and Pete
Hegseth invites real-world problems that have to be dealt with in the here and
now and in the realm of politics rather than in the realm of philosophy.
Trump’s lawlessness is not a theoretical crisis waiting for the next election
to be made manifest—the crisis is upon us. The only thing we can be sure of is
that such manful advocates of the constitutional order as Sens. Ted Cruz, Tom
Cotton, and John Thune have grown too accustomed to life on their knees to
stand up for themselves, for the country, or for anything.
And there no presidential pardon can put off the judgment
that awaits them.
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