Baltimore Sun

Three reasons the House should impeach Trump, even if the Senate won’t remove him

- By Robert Reich

Not even overwhelmi­ng evidence that President Donald Trump sought to bribe a foreign power to dig up dirt on his leading political opponent in 2020 — and did so with American taxpayer dollars while compromisi­ng American foreign policy — will cause Mr. Trump to be removed from office.

That’s because there’s zero chance that 20 Republican senators — the number needed to convict Mr. Trump, if every Democratic senator votes to do so — have enough integrity to do what the Constituti­on requires them to do.

Republican senators will put their jobs and their political party ahead of the Constituti­on and the country. They will tell themselves that 88% of Republican voters still support Mr. Trump, and that their duty is to them.

It does not matter that these voters inhabit a parallel political universe consisting of Trump tweets, Fox News, right-wing radio and Trump-Russian social media, all propoundin­g the absurd counter-narrative that Democrats, the “deep state,” coastal elites and mainstream media are conspiring to remove the Chosen One from office.

So if there’s no chance of getting the 20 Republican votes needed to convict Mr. Trump and send him packing, is there any reason for the House to impeach him?

Yes. There are three reasons.

The first is the Constituti­on itself. Mr. Trump has openly and brazenly abused his power, not only seeking electoral help from foreign nations but making money off his presidency in violation of the emoluments clause, spending funds never appropriat­ed by Congress in violation of the separation of powers, obstructin­g justice and violating his oath to faithfully execute the law.

A failure by Congress to respond to these abuses would effectivel­y render the Constituti­on meaningles­s. Congress has no alternativ­e but to respond.

The second reason is political. While the impeachmen­t hearings don’t appear to have moved Republican voters, only 29% of Americans still identify as Republican.

The hearings do seem to have affected Democrats and independen­ts, as well as many people who sat out the 2016 election. National polls by Morning Consult/Politico and SSRS/CNN show that 50% of respondent­s now support both impeaching Mr. Trump and removing him from office — an increase from Morning Consult/Politico’s mid-November poll.

Presumably, anyone who now favors removing Mr. Trump from office will be inclined to vote against him next November. The House’s impeachmen­t could therefore help swing the 2020 election against him.

The third reason for the House to impeach Mr. Trump even if the Senate won’t convict him concerns the pardoning power of the president.

Assume that Mr. Trump is impeached on grounds that include a raft of federal crimes — bribery, treason, obstructio­n of justice, election fraud, money laundering, conspiracy to defraud the United States, making false statements to the federal government, serving as an agent of a foreign government without registerin­g with the Justice Department, accepting donations from foreign nationals and so on.

Regardless of whether a sitting president can be indicted and convicted on such criminal charges, Mr. Trump will become liable to them at some point. But could he be pardoned, as Gerald Ford pardoned Richard Nixon 45 years ago?

Article II, section 2 of the Constituti­on gives a president the power to pardon anyone who has been convicted of offenses against the United States, with one exception: “in cases of impeachmen­t.”

If Mr. Trump is impeached by the House, he can never be pardoned for these crimes. He cannot pardon himself (it’s dubious that a president has this selfpardon­ing power in any event), and he cannot be pardoned by a future president.

Even if a subsequent president wanted to pardon Mr. Trump in the interest of, say, domestic tranquilit­y, she could not.

Gerald Ford wrote in his pardon of Mr. Nixon that if Mr. Nixon were indicted and subject to a criminal trial, “the tranquilit­y to which this nation has been restored by the events of recent weeks could be irreparabl­y lost.”

Had the House impeached Mr. Nixon, Mr. Ford’s hands would have been tied.

Mr. Trump isn’t going to be as lucky. The House will probably impeach him before Christmas.

After that, he will be quite literally unpardonab­le.

Robert Reich, a former U.S. Secretary of Labor, is professor of public policy at the University of California at Berkeley. His latest book is “The Common Good.” His documentar­y, “Saving Capitalism,” is available on Netflix.

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