By Jonah
Goldberg
Wednesday,
August 09, 2023
America
blew it.
I
generally support special prosecutor Jack Smith’s indictments of Donald Trump.
The classified documents case is open and shut as far as I can tell. As for the
charges dealing with the former president’s attempt to steal the election, they
are a heavier lift as a strictly legal matter. Some charges may not clear the
evidentiary and legal hurdles in their path, but they are still worth
bringing.
Trump
supporters disagree. Their arguments span from anti-American idiocy
(Trump is essentially America’s Alexei Nalvany) to good faith, nuanced, complaints about the
insufficiency of the statutes Smith is relying upon.
But even
if Smith has the law and evidence entirely on his side, the fact that we’ve
arrived at the point of prosecuting a former president is proof of the breakdown
of republicanism.
That
Trump was nominated, never mind elected, president is a sign of collective,
systemic failure. Blame is not evenly distributed among the parties, voters,
the media and other institutions, but nearly all deserve their share.
There
isn’t room here to tell the full story from the beginning. I’d start with Bill
Clinton and Newt Gingrich, though you could make the case it begins with
Richard Nixon.
Regardless,
without the populist polarization of our politics a man as unfit for high
office as Trump would never get near the presidency. Had we not spent decades
weakening political parties with well-intentioned, but ultimately foolish,
“reforms” like outsourcing nominations to primaries and campaign finance
changes that, together, gutted the ability of parties to bar unfit candidates
from the nominating process, Trump would still be a reality show host.
We spent
decades, on the right and left, weakening institutional, journalistic and
cultural walls between politics and entertainment and then were surprised when
the tide of populist passion swamped good government.
The
impeachment process, intended as a republican check on the abuse of power, is
illustrative. After three invocations in 25 years, the impeachment clause has
become a constitutional zombie clause, functionally dead but still capable of
damage.
Two of
the most powerful corruptors of American politics—or republican virtue—are
populism and legalism. Populism assumes that large, angry constituencies are
right regardless of what the law or Constitution says. Legalism, in this
context, works on the assumption that officials, including politicians, can
avoid doing what’s right if they can hide their cowardice behind some legal
technicality.
Obviously,
naked violations of criminal law are impeachable. But so are violations of the
public trust. In the early drafts of the Constitution, impeachable offenses
were called “maladministration,” describing misdeeds that are not necessarily
criminal but that are nonetheless corruptly self-serving. James Madison, who forced the
replacement of “maladministration” with “high crimes and misdemeanors”
nonetheless believed that misusing presidential powers for
corrupt schemes (like pardoning allies to further such schemes) was
subject to impeachment.
But in
Trump’s two impeachments, populism and legalism formed a pincer movement that
foreclosed conviction. The ubiquitous GOP claim that convicting Trump would “overturn” the will of the people was populist blather. Trump
lost the popular vote, and no one voted for Trump to do any of the things that
got him impeached. Removal from office in the first impeachment wouldn’t have
made Hillary Clinton president, but it would have placed Mike Pence in the
White House, and he got as many votes as Trump himself.
As for
the legalism, my God. Over and over, defenders and accusers alike, talked about
impeachment as if it were a criminal proceeding (as in Bill Clinton’s
impeachment trial). Terms like “beyond a reasonable doubt,” “due process,” “no one is above the law” peppered the airwaves.
TV lawyers, on all sides, would occasionally admit “impeachment is a political
process” and then proceed to pretend that only lawyers, not politicians, were
equipped with the expertise to decide what is or isn’t impeachable.
And
politicians were all too eager to buck responsibility by deferring to the
lawyers.
In a
republic, legitimacy is derived from popular consent. But the only oath officials take
is to the Constitution, not the people who elected them (or to their bosses).
Their mandate is neither their personal ambition nor popular passion, but the
public good and the constitutional order.
Political
parties, likewise, are supposed to be republican in that they’re obliged to
protect a set of ideals and interests that are more important than any single
politician. The press is supposed to do more than cater to the passions of
their audience.
Smith’s
indictments are a necessity because so many others refused to do what’s
necessary.
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