Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Forget self-pardons

- NOAH FELDMAN

Here’s some unsolicite­d advice for President Donald Trump: Don’t listen to any lawyers who might tell you that you can pardon yourself, or even that it’s a close legal question. You can’t—and no court is going to rule otherwise.

There’s a decent historical argument about why, but it’s beside the point. The bottom line is that if the president could pardon himself, we would no longer have a republic, nor a government of laws rather than men. We would be a dictatorsh­ip, not a democracy.

You know that. Americans know it. The Supreme Court knows it. Now let’s move on.

The very idea of self-pardon is the kind of silly technicali­ty that non-lawyers think lawyers engage in all the time. I’m not going to offer a full-throated defense of the legal profession, but we’re not really that dumb or bad, at least not usually.

The idea of the pardon power itself is old, going back at least to medieval England and the king. It is based, roughly speaking, on the idea that the king is in charge of administer­ing the common law and therefore has the authority to go around that law and issue a pardon or reprieve when it’s desirable to do so.

This made some sense in a system that wasn’t democratic and imposed the death penalty as punishment for all felonies, including relatively minor ones.

In theory the justificat­ion could be mercy, that most Christian of virtues. In practice, kings sometimes issued pardons to political allies, or in exchange for compensati­on, or to get military conscripts.

In Philadelph­ia, the more rights-oriented republican­s like George Mason of Virginia questioned the whole idea of the pardon power. The more pro-executive participan­ts, like Alexander Hamilton and James Wilson, managed to get it in, albeit without much debate. The idea was that pardons served mercy and could be expedient.

No one so much as hinted that the president could pardon himself. The king, after all, was above the law—he would never have to pardon himself because he could never be brought before one of his own courts. The president wasn’t above the law.

But frankly, the history isn’t the point. The basic problem with self-pardon is that it would make a mockery of the very idea that the U.S. operates under the rule of law. A president who could self-pardon could violate literally any federal law with impunity, knowing that the only risk was removal from office by impeachmen­t.

It’s true that no court has ever held that the president can’t pardon himself—because no president has so outrageous­ly tried to flout our basic constituti­onal principles.

We can thank God for that. But more immediatel­y, we can thank a constituti­onal structure that is designed to limit the institutio­nal power of any single branch of government.

The Republic isn’t about to turn into a dictatorsh­ip. To make sure things stay that way, no one should talk as though self-pardon is a realistic possibilit­y. It isn’t—not in a functionin­g democracy with the rule of law.

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