Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Can Trump pardon himself? Not if he’s impeached

- By Anne Flaherty

WASHINGTON » President Donald Trump once joked he could “stand in the middle of Fifth Avenue and shoot somebody” and not lose voter support. The quip was intended as hyperbole to make a point on the loyalty of his base.

Now, Trump says, he has the power to keep himself out of jail if he wanted, declaring an “absolute right to PARDON myself.” This time, though, it seems he isn’t joking.

But there is a big limit in the world of presidenti­al pardons: impeachmen­t.

A look at what’s true and what’s not when it comes to presidenti­al pardons:

SO PRESIDENTS GET TO DO WHAT EXACTLY?

Under the Constituti­on, the president has the power to grant “reprieves and pardons” for federal (but not state) crimes, essentiall­y wiping out a person’s conviction­s. The power is, as Trump says, “absolute” in that pardons can’t be overturned by Congress or the courts.

Almost every president has used his pardon powers, but somewhat narrowly — focusing on overturnin­g cases when they believe a severe injustice has been done or is needed to heal partisan rifts.

President Andrew Johnson, for example, granted blanket pardons to soldiers who fought in the Confederat­e Army as a practical way of reuniting the nation following the Civil War. And President Gerald Ford in 1974 pardoned his predecesso­r, Richard Nixon, for all federal crimes Nixon “has committed or may have committed or taken part in” during his presidency, on the grounds that the nation had become too “polarized” and needed to move past the Watergate scandal.

THE BIG EXCEPTION

There is one notable exception to a president’s pardoning powers Trump doesn’t mention: cases of impeachmen­t. Under the U.S. system of checks and balances, Congress can hold presidents accountabl­e by ousting them using impeachmen­t trials.

Only two presidents have been impeached by the House, although both were acquitted by the Senate: Johnson in 1868 after he clashed with Congress over reconstruc­tion of the South and Bill Clinton in 1998 on charges of lying under oath and obstructin­g justice concerning his sexual relationsh­ip with Monica Lewinsky.

(Nixon avoided impeachmen­t by resigning could vote.)

The bottom line is that Trump retains his pardoning powers up until a possible impeachmen­t. And considerin­g that impeachmen­t trials tend to be wildly partisan before the House affairs, it is unlikely Trump would be ousted so long as the GOP still controls the House and Senate.

PARDONS AS A POLITICAL WEAPON

A person doesn’t have to be convicted for a pardon to take place. That was the case in the Iran-Contra scandal, which involved the secret sales of weapons overseas by the Reagan administra­tion.

By the time the chief prosecutor in the case was prepared to present evidence of a highlevel cover-up in court, President George H.W. Bush blocked the prosecutio­n of several central figures using his pardoning power. The pardons infuriated the prosecutor, Lawrence Walsh, and the $47 million investigat­ion resulted in only one person sent to prison.

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 ?? EVAN VUCCI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this photo, President Donald Trump pumps his fist as he steps off Air Force One after arriving at Ellington Field Joint Reserve Base, in Houston.
EVAN VUCCI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this photo, President Donald Trump pumps his fist as he steps off Air Force One after arriving at Ellington Field Joint Reserve Base, in Houston.

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