By Jonah Goldberg
Wednesday, June
06, 2018
In conservative circles, few arguments are more
triggering than those that begin: “The Founding Fathers never could have
imagined…”
There are several reasons conservatives don’t like this
line of reasoning, but chief among them is that it gives license to
progressives to exceed constitutional restraints. Because the founders never
could have imagined air travel, AR-15s, or Twitter, the logic goes, we are free
to come up with laws that violate the text or intent of the Constitution.
The conservative response is that the Constitution’s
guidelines are timelessly applicable in most cases, and that when they are not,
we should amend the Constitution rather than read things into it that are not
there. As a rule, I subscribe to this view. But I am really struggling with the
latest challenge to this worldview emanating from the White House.
President Trump and his team have staked out two
positions. First, that the president can pardon himself for any federal crime.
Second, that a sitting president cannot be indicted while in office for any
reason.
Thus, even if Trump did fire former FBI director James
Comey to obstruct the Russia probe, that couldn’t be obstruction of justice
because the president essentially is
the Justice Department. In an interview with the HuffPost, Rudy Giuliani went so far as to claim that even if the
president murdered Comey, Trump couldn’t be indicted for obstruction without
first being impeached and removed from office.
Now, believe it or not, there are credible arguments
behind both of these claims. The Department of Justice has long held as a
matter of policy and constitutional interpretation that a sitting president
cannot, or should not, be indicted, because the presidency is bound up in a
single person.
As for Trump’s pardon power, it is at least arguable that
the founders anticipated the possibility that a president might pardon himself.
As my National Review colleague
Andrew McCarthy, a former federal prosecutor, noted last year: “The Pardon
Clause says that while the president may pardon any federal offense, this does
not extend to ‘Cases of Impeachment.’ The Framers thus expressly considered a
president’s potential use of the pardon power to benefit himself.”
When the Constitution was written, there were only three
federal crimes: piracy, counterfeiting, and treason. In that context, the
pardon power was an important tool of statecraft. Pardoning is an act of
forgiveness, and one can imagine presidential magnanimity might foster social
peace in a young nation full of revolutionary hotheads. The first presidential
pardon, issued by George Washington, forgave two men of treason during the
Whiskey Rebellion.
Here’s my dilemma (and I cringe to write these words):
The Founding Fathers never imagined that the federal government would grow into
the behemoth it is today. For good reasons and bad, we’ve set up a vast national
legal apparatus with sweeping police powers. The government cannot even give a
definitive answer to the question of how many federal crimes there are today.
(Recent estimates range from 3,600 to 4,500.)
The president retains the power to pardon anybody who
runs afoul of the federal government. That’s probably a good thing, given how
opportunities to abuse authority have multiplied along with the number of
federal crimes.
But the founders also imagined that an assertive and
independent Congress charged with oversight would investigate crimes and
misdeeds by the executive branch. Instead, we evolved — or blundered — into a
system where the executive branch, in the form of the DOJ or FBI (established
in 1870 and 1908, respectively), investigates itself. Some Trump defenders have
a point when they worry that Mueller — an arm of the executive branch — is
really acting like a fact-finding organ for a future (Democratic) House
impeachment committee.
The idea that the president can’t obstruct justice is
predicated on a power that the founders did not fully intend for the executive
branch to have in the first place.
Also, I’m unconvinced that the president can use the
pardon power on himself. Pardoning is essentially a judicial act, and as James
Madison wrote in the Federalist No. 10: “No man is allowed to be a judge in his
own cause, because his interest would certainly bias his judgment, and, not
improbably, corrupt his integrity.”
I could be wrong, but it seems we are way outside what
the founders had in mind. I have a hard time believing they would shrug at a
president assassinating an inconvenient FBI director and then pardoning himself
for the crime.
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