New Era

Analysts: Trump’s indictment a democratic move

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WASHINGTON – Former United States president Donald Trump has denounced his indictment, saying it is an abuse befitting a banana republic.

However, the move to indict him puts the United States in line with fellow advanced democracie­s that have prosecuted former leaders.

Countries such as France, Israel, Italy, South Korea, Romania and Croatia are among nations where courts have convicted former presidents or prime ministers. Other countries include Germany, Japan, and Portugal.

For the United States, there is no precedent in the republic’s nearly 250-year history. Trump is the first current or former president to be charged with a crime.

Trump, who has faced a slew of legal accusation­s, is expected to hand himself over to the police in New York tomorrow. He is being indicted over a US$130 000 payment allegedly made to an adult film star to buy her silence during his 2016 campaign over an affair. “There is evidence out there that democracie­s can be, and are, able to hold former leaders accountabl­e,” said Shelley Inglis, a former United Nations expert on democratic governance and rule of law, who is now at the University of Dayton.

“It is a teaching moment for the United States when you have not had that sort of test, to think about what is the strength of our democratic institutio­ns when they are meeting the biggest challenge - to hold the most powerful people to account,” she said.

She pointed to France where two former presidents, Jacques Chirac, and Nicolas Sarkozy, were convicted of corruption, as an example where democratic institutio­ns were not weakened but strengthen­ed, despite “inevitable” accusation­s from partisans that charges are politicall­y motivated. Israel imprisoned former prime minister Ehud Olmert over fraud charges and former president Moshe Katsav for rape.

Israel’s current and longest-serving prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, faces bribery, fraud and breach of trust charges. Recent attempts by his government to weaken the judiciary sparked massive protests.

In South Korea, two successive presidents, Lee Myung-bak, and Park Geun-hye, were jailed for bribery or corruption, although both were pardoned. The United States on Wednesday appointed South Korea to lead a third global Summit for Democracy.

The most frequent internatio­nal comparison to Trump has been Italian tycoon and three-time prime minister Silvio Berlusconi, who has faced dozens of trials, including over alleged bribery and sex with an underage girl.

The 86-year-old Berlusconi has never spent time behind bars, perhaps giving Trump a bit of hope.

Trump and his Republican allies have raged against the charges led by Alvin Bragg, Manhattan’s elected district attorney. The former president’s son Eric Trump has described the indictment as “thirdworld prosecutor­ial misconduct.”

Developing nations, of course, are full of cases in which charges against former leaders have raised widespread doubts. Last year, Pakistan saw street protests over the ousting of Prime Minister Imran Khan, who has since been hit with charges that include terrorism.

In Brazil, leftist icon Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva was jailed for corruption, although the conviction was overturned and he is again president.

The closest the United States came previously to prosecutin­g a former president was with Richard Nixon over the 1972 break-in of the office of the rival Democratic Party at the Watergate Hotel in Washington.

Nixon’s successor, Gerald Ford, pardoned him - a move that was deeply controvers­ial at the time, although it proved more popular in hindsight.

But Nixon paid a price. Uniquely in US history, he was forced to resign as president, after support within his Republican Party deteriorat­ed.

US politics are now more polarised, with most Republican­s staunchly defending Trump during his unpreceden­ted two impeachmen­ts.

James D Long, a professor of political science at the University of Washington, said prosecutor­s may have pursued Trump in part because he faces so many different allegation­s, not one single campaign finance issue.

At the global level, prosecutin­g former leaders “is not only something that has happened historical­ly, but it’s becoming increasing­ly common,” Long said. Still, Long noted that there have been allegation­s of wrongdoing by US presidents as far back as the early 19th century, and more recently over Bill Clinton’s dalliance with Monica Lewinsky and George W Bush’s Iraq invasion. “From Trump’s perspectiv­e, he is probably looking back and asking, why am I the first guy since 1789?” Long said. “I think Americans are really going to have to confront the fact that our system has looked the other way for a long time - probably when it shouldn’t have.”

 ?? Photo: Nampa/AFP ?? Solidarity… Supporters of former US president Donald Trump gathered near Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach, Florida.
Photo: Nampa/AFP Solidarity… Supporters of former US president Donald Trump gathered near Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach, Florida.

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