Please. Trump is obstructing justice every single day. In public.
by digby
The most powerful man on earth threatening witnesses and dangling pardons on his twitter feed makes that obvious. I can’t believe there’s any doubt!
Elizabeth Holzman was a House Judiciary Committee member during the Watergate hearings. She takes issue with Barr’s assertions with respect to presidents obstructing justice:
William P. Barr… misrepresents key facts of the impeachment proceedings against Richard M. Nixon in 1974 in order to limit the grounds for prosecuting President Trump. As a member of the House Judiciary Committee, I was a witness to that history and I know that Barr is not accurate.
Barr claims in his memo that presidents can’t be prosecuted for obstruction of justice on a basis of acts that don’t strictly involve impairment of evidence. Only inherently “bad acts” — such as destroying evidence or tampering with witnesses — are prosecutable, he asserts.
According to Barr, when the House Judiciary Committee drafted its articles of impeachment in July 1974, “the acts of obstruction alleged against” Nixon “were all such bad acts involving impairment of evidence.”
Barr is flat-out wrong. We had numerous grounds for Nixon’s impeachment for obstructing and impeding the investigation into the Watergate break-in that did not involve evidence impairment in the narrow way Barr defines the term. I will cite just two.
One ground for impeachment was that Nixon ordered the firing of Watergate special prosecutor Archibald Cox, who was seeking White House tapes of presidential conversations. Whether the president had the power to fire Cox was irrelevant to the impeachment. Instead, the issue was that the president could not use his power to undermine, or halt, an investigation into his own possible criminal conduct or that of his aides. Although the committee explicitly was not bound by the obstruction-of-justice statute, it still viewed Cox’s firing as an effort to squelch the criminal investigation. As such, it was an abuse of power and an obstruction — and impeachable. It is worth noting that Trump’s firing of FBI Director James B. Comey — for insisting on continuing the Russia investigation — seems to fall squarely under this precedent.
Another example of Barr’s revisionist history turns on Nixon’s use of presidential pardons. One of the grounds for Nixon’s impeachment was that he authorized offers of presidential pardons to the Watergate burglars to keep them from telling prosecutors about the involvement of higher-ups in the break-in. While no one contested the president’s broad pardon powers, the committee voted to impeach Nixon for using those pardon powers to interfere with the criminal investigation. Trump seems to have similarly used those powers with regard to his campaign chairman, Paul Manafort, and is reported to have made or authorized pardon offers to other aides for purposes of gaining silence. Here again, Trump’s conduct appears to replicate the impeachable misdeeds of Nixon.
As troubling as Barr’s misguided and clumsy attempt to rewrite history is his broader effort to elevate the president into a kind of unaccountable monarch. This is part of a quiet Republican campaign over the past generation to locate in the Constitution grounds for a powerful “unitary executive” who is virtually above the law. For Barr, presidential acts such as offering pardons or firing prosecutors cannot be prosecuted even if they have the effect of interfering with an investigation of the president. The reason, according to Barr, is that the president’s underlying motives in offering the pardons or in firing the officials may not be scrutinized. Why can’t they be scrutinized? For Barr, allowing such questioning undermines the very foundation of the presidency, and the executive branch of government.
But merely to describe Barr’s position is to show its absurdity. Take the case of Nixon, who was named an unindicted co-conspirator by the Watergate grand jury during his presidency. Neither the presidency nor the country fell apart as a result. Moreover, there is nothing in the Constitution that puts the president beyond questioning or accountability. (The framers knew how to prevent questioning when they wanted to — they provided that members of Congress “shall not be questioned in any other place” for any speech or debate in the House or Senate.) The Constitution is very plain that a president may be prosecuted for crimes committed while in office. The Constitution doesn’t hem that provision of accountability at all — there is no language restricting the scope of the prosecution or of the investigation. Indeed, the framers wanted to make it crystal clear that even impeachment was not a substitute for prosecution. Barr’s theory is derived from thin air, or maybe not even that.
Barr indicated to today that issuing pardons for corrupt reasons would be a crime. He didn’t say which one which raises the question of how it can be completely ina president’s prerogative to fire someone in the executive branch who happens to be investigating him while it would be a crime to pardon someone who might testify against him. Indeed, the pardon power actually is right there in the constitution and it’s undeniably plenary. So I don’t get it.
Anyway, Holzman makes a good point. And we should be mindful of the fact that two GOP presidents in the last 40 years have been credibly accused of impeding investigations into their own corruption. Two others have issued (and one is currently threatening to issue) pardons to help cover up serious crimes committed by the president and/or members of the administration.
This is just in the last half-century. It’s all come from one party which is proving itself over and over again, each time it is elected to high office, to be a corrupt enterprise. Donald Trump didn’t invent this stuff. He’s just the over-the-top, half-wit, third generation of such GOP leaders. (It turns out that phenomenon isn’t confined to monarchies…) It’s clearly a serious institutional problem in the Republican Party that’s now evolved into a crisis in which an openly criminal, inept — and possibly compromised — boob leads the nation.
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