Amid what-ifs, the 25th Amendment explained
Is President Donald Trump crazy? Not can-youbelieve-he-really-said-that? crazy. Mentally-unfit-toserve-as-president crazy.
It’s an outlandish assertion — insulting, really — and a measure of the antipathy of Trump’s critics that some, including members of Congress, have seriously raised the subject. Which brings us to the 25th Amendment.
Born of the Cold War and enacted after the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, the language amounts to a bit of technical housekeeping appended to the Constitution. It outlines the presidential line of succession, including procedures in the even the chief executive “is unable to discharge the powers and duties of his office.”
With impeachment of Trump an exceedingly long shot, especially given the GOP’s hold on Congress, a small chorus of Democrats has suggested an even less likely antidote to a presidency they cannot and will not abide: removing Trump on the ground he is mentally unsound.
Rep. Zoe Lofgren, D-Calif., has introduced a resolution urging Trump to seek a medical and psychiatric evaluation to determine his fitness for office. Rep. Ted Lieu, D-Calif., has talked up legislation requiring a psychiatrist be stationed at the White House.
The president’s spokeswoman has brushed aside questions about Trump’s mental health as beneath contempt. “Ridiculous and outrageous” and unworthy of a response, said press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders, responding to a suggestion by Sen. Bob Corker, a Tennessee Republican, that Trump “has not yet been able to demonstrate the stability, nor some of the competence, that he needs to demonstrate in order to be successful.”
Still, the 25th Amendment is having a moment. Searches spiked on Google during the president’s fiery appearance at a rally Tuesday in Phoenix. president.
The chances of any of this taking place, short of a medical crisis, are between improbable and impossible.
If the vice president and Cabinet declared the president incapacitated, he could reclaim his powers by writing to legislative leaders and declaring his ability to do the job. If the vice president and Cabinet members object, the matter then gets kicked over to Congress, which has 21 days to act. It would require a two-thirds vote in both chambers to strip the president of his powers, once and for all.
A bit of history: The Constitution makes it pretty clear the vice president is next in line to the president. But there was some question about how exactly that worked, and quite a kerfuffle in the 1840s when President William Henry Harrison died and Vice President John Tyler took over.
Fast-forward to the Eisenhower years. After a 1955 heart attack and other serious maladies, the president worried about the transfer of power if he were temporarily incapacitated, especially given volatile relations with the Soviet Union. President Dwight Eisenhower worked out an informal arrangement with his vice president, Richard Nixon, in case he needed to temporarily cede power. Still, Eisenhower thought it better to have some mechanism explicitly spelled out in the Constitution.
After Kennedy died in 1963, Democratic Sen. Birch Bayh of Indiana took up the matter as chairman of the Senate subcommittee on constitutional amendments. Congress passed the 25th Amendment in 1965 and it was ratified in 1967.