Dayton Daily News

So, who presides at trial if Trump’s out of office?

- By Mark Sherman

The Constituti­on WASHINGTON — says the chief justice is to preside at the impeachmen­t trial of a president. But what about an ex-president?

Like so much else about the Constituti­on, the answer is subject to interpreta­tion.

If President Donald Trump’s trial begins after Jan. 20, it’s not clear whether Chief Justice John Roberts would make his way to the Senate chamber as he did last year for Trump’s first trial.

Impeachmen­t scholars, law professors and political scientists offer differing views.

The choices appear to be Roberts, Kamala Harris, who by then will be vice president, or Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., who will be the Senate’s president pro tem once the Democrats gain control of the Senate.

The issue is “unsettled, completely without precedent, and unspecific in existing Senate rules and precedents,” Princeton University political scientist Keith Whittingto­n wrote in an email.

One reason that the Constituti­on specifies the chief justice to run the president’s trial is that the person who otherwise presides over the Senate is the vice president — the very person who would assume the presidency if the chief executive is convicted. That’s a bit unseemly.

But if the stakes are changed and the sitting vice president no longer stands to get the top job, why not have Harris, who will have taken over for Mike Pence, preside?

Whittingto­n said he thinks that could happen, “as with the impeachmen­t of any officer other than the president.” But he said he “can imagine that the Senate might go the other way and treat a former president the same as a sitting president.”

University of Texas law professor Steven Vladeck said the chief justice is the better choice. The House on Wednesday impeached the president, not the former president, Vladeck tweeted.

“Indeed, if Trump resigned (or his term ended) mid-trial, it would be more than a little odd for the Chief Justice to give way to the Vice President. The question should be whether the impeached officer was President at the time of impeachmen­t. Here, he was, so Roberts presides,” Vladeck wrote. Another factor in favor of Roberts is that “a trial of a President is a momentous event,” Georgia State University law professor Neil Kinkopf said.

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