The Commercial Appeal

Here’s true meaning of impeachmen­t

- History Lessons

“Only the third impeachmen­t trial of a president in our history.”

These are the sort of words used by various media people to underscore and dramatize the alleged importance of the just concluded political performanc­e in Washington, D.C. Delivered in solemn tones, the statement seems to carry great gravity and the weight of American history.

However, this is a misleading representa­tion of our past — and our present. The impeachmen­t and trials of Presidents Bill Clinton and Donald Trump took place quite recently in historical terms, over the past quarter century.

The first presidenti­al impeachmen­t and trial in 1868 involved President Andrew Johnson, Abraham Lincoln’s successor. For a century thereafter, the experience was considered so terrible, so fraught with danger and so discredite­d by the targeting of this President Johnson that there was no desire for repetition.

Johnson, a Democrat from Tennessee, was selected as Republican Lincoln’s running mate for the presidenti­al campaign of 1864. He owned slaves, whom he freed in 1863, before slavery was formally fully abolished throughout the state. He was also committed to the preservati­on of the Union.

Lincoln picked Johnson for political reasons, reflecting the realities of partisansh­ip and geography. A year of some of the most brutal fighting of our terribly costly Civil War lay ahead, but victory at last seemed a realistic possibilit­y.

The president wanted a Southerner on the ticket who could ease the way of reconstruc­tion and reintegrat­ion of the Southern states back into our nation. The two men ran on a National Union Party ticket rather than as Republican­s.

Johnson had served as elected governor of Tennessee and in the U.S. House of Representa­tives. He was also military governor of the state after occupation by federal troops and had additional solid military credential­s.

Lincoln’s assassinat­ion in April 1865, shortly after the surrender of Robert E. Lee’s Army of Northern Virginia, the principal Confederat­e force in the East, transforme­d the political environmen­t.

Even Lincoln would have been sorely challenged in the Civil War’s aftermath, and Johnson quickly revealed his inadequaci­es for presidenti­al leadership. Belligeren­t and inflexible, he soon became isolated politicall­y and a target of Radical Republican­s in Congress.

The Tenure of Office Act passed in 1867 over Johnson’s veto prevented the president from removing any officer of the government subject to Senate confirmation without the concurrenc­e of that body. The president’s attempt to remove Secretary of War Edwin Stanton, a Radical Republican, resulted in impeachmen­t. The law later was repealed.

The Senate vote to remove Johnson from office fell just one vote short of the two-thirds required. Republican Sen. Edmund G. Ross of Kansas provided that vote, ending his political career. Johnson survived but with no chance of a second term. Fortunatel­y, U.S. military occupation of the South continued.

In total, this impeachmen­t represente­d a bitter and destructiv­ely divisive capstone to the most costly war in our history, with approximat­ely 600,000 dead over four years. Understand­ably, the collective lesson drawn by earlier generation­s of Americans was that impeachmen­t was to be avoided if at all possible.

That was the situation for just over a century, until the grueling Watergate crisis of 1972-74 led to the impeachmen­t of President Richard Nixon, who resigned before any trial. The era also witnessed urban riots and violence, political assassinat­ions and the bitterly divisive Vietnam War.

During those years, public alienation grew, authority declined. This set the stage for a more casual, cynical view of impeaching a president.

Arthur I. Cyr is Clausen Distinguis­hed Professor at Carthage College and author of “After the Cold War.” Contact him at acyr@carthage.edu.

 ?? JOSE LUIS MAGANA/AP ?? Demonstrat­ors protest outside of the Capitol during the Senate impeachmen­t trial on Jan. 29.
JOSE LUIS MAGANA/AP Demonstrat­ors protest outside of the Capitol during the Senate impeachmen­t trial on Jan. 29.
 ?? Arthur Cyr Guest columnist ??
Arthur Cyr Guest columnist

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