Dayton Daily News

Law vs. morality in Trump campaign-finance flap

- Jonah Goldberg

Let’s imagine that President Trump gave a White House news conference in the nude. “As you can see,” he might say, paraphrasi­ng the semi-apocryphal quip Winston Churchill made when FDR accidental­ly encountere­d him emerging from a hot bath in the White House, disrobed. “I have nothing to hide from the American people.”

In the District of Columbia, public indecency of this sort is a misdemeano­r punishable by a fine of $500 and up to 90 days in jail. Yet few people would immediatel­y defend the president’s behavior as nothing more than a minor legal faux pas. (Save, perhaps, the vice president, who might applaud such presidenti­al transparen­cy.)

This kind of violation of norms and decency would have the Cabinet scrambling to invoke the 25th Amendment. Even the Republican House Freedom Caucus would talk openly about impeachmen­t, because the public FROM THE RIGHT Michelle Malkin Star Parker Jonah Goldberg Walter E. Williams Pat Buchanan Marc E. Thiessen George Will would have lost faith and confidence in the president almost as quickly as it would if he had stood in the middle of Fifth Avenue and shot someone.

Meanwhile, in the real world, the president stands credibly accused of violating far more serious laws than misdemeano­r public indecency. In filings last week, the U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York told a judge that the president abetted campaign finance violations — felonies that come with a maximum prison sentence of five years.

But the reaction to these accusation­s, from both his defenders and his critics, is a fog of legalisms. The only difference between the two sides is whether or not the alleged illegaliti­es are grave or trivial.

The real issue should be whether or not the president has violated the public trust, a concept that covers far more than squabbling between lawyers.

This is a point that conservati­ves once understood. Here is Franklin Graham, the son of Billy Graham, writing about Bill Clinton in the Wall Street Journal in 1998: “If he will lie to or mislead his wife and daughter, those with whom he is most intimate, what will prevent him from doing the same to the American public?”

In May, when weighing in on the allegation­s of infidelity against Trump, Graham completely reversed his stance on the topic of private versus public behavior. “That’s for him and his wife to deal with,” he told the Associated Press. “And I think this thing with Stormy Daniels and so forth is nobody’s business.”

The point here isn’t hypocrisy, though there’s plenty of that going around. Before the Monica Lewinsky scandal, Clinton’s defenders considered his past sexual behavior “old news.” After the revelation­s, they insisted that perjury about sex was no big deal. Now, many of those same people are arguing that illegal cover-ups of affairs are grounds for impeachmen­t.

It’s not quite an applesto-apples comparison, but that’s irrelevant. The point is that we’ve lost the ability to speak clearly across partisan lines about basic notions of decency and morality. The debate over impeachmen­t highlights the problem. A president can be impeached for any reason Congress sees fit. It’s a political tool for sanctionin­g a president who violates the public trust. The rules of criminal procedure are only relevant procedural­ly. Instead, they are used as a substitute for moral or civic judgment.

I am not arguing for impeaching Trump based on what we know now. The precedent of Clinton’s impeachmen­t (but acquittal in the Senate) demonstrat­es, among other things, that politicall­y you need more than this for a binding national consensus.

I am arguing that we’ve lost anything remotely like a moral consensus in this country because legalism has crowded out morality. That’s the naked truth.

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