The Arizona Republic

Biden still can, should pardon Trump

- EJ Montini Reach Montini at ed.montini@arizonarep­ublic.com.

Republican Sen. Mitt Romney got it right — and wrong — when he said last week that President Joe Biden should have pardoned Donald Trump of the federal charges he faces.

He got the “should have” part right, but he failed to suggest the follow-up: Still can.

And then follow that with:

Should.

A year ago in April, I said that if Trump was indicted for federal crimes, Biden should pardon him.

(A president can’t pardon anyone for state crimes, like those Trump has been charged with in New York and Georgia.)

Among the many responses I received, one of the few that could be printed in a family publicatio­n came from Terry W., who wrote:

“President Joe Biden should pardon Donald Trump??? NO. FRIGGEN. WAY. Sure didn’t expect something like this out of you, Montini. Donald HAS TO PAY FOR HIS CRIMES.”

In theory, yes. But we do not live in a theoretica­l world. And you know, and I know, that in today’s world, Trump will not pay for his crimes.

Just the opposite.

We will pay for his crimes.

Back in 1974, then-President Gerald Ford was faced with a similar situation.

After former President Richard Nixon resigned because of his involvemen­t in the Watergate scandal, for which he would have faced criminal prosecutio­n, Ford announced that he had decided to “grant a full, free and absolute pardon” to Nixon.

Ford later appeared before a congressio­nal committee and told them, “I was absolutely convinced then as I am now that if we had had an indictment, a trial, a conviction and anything else that transpired after this that the attention of the president, the Congress and the American people would have been diverted from the problems that we have to solve.”

Sort of like the situation we have now.

Romney said Biden should have pardoned Trump, then pressured state prosecutor­s to drop their cases.

He said, “You may disagree with this, but had I been President Biden, when the Justice Department brought on indictment­s, I would have immediatel­y pardoned him.

“I’d have pardoned President Trump. Why? Well, because it makes me, President Biden, the big guy and the person I pardoned a little guy.”

That’s true. Besides, we all know that should Trump be elected president, he will pardon himself.

Granting Trump a pardon not only would show the country that Biden is the better person, the “big guy” to Trump’s “little guy” as Romney put it, but it could keep Trump out of the Oval Office.

Particular­ly if Biden were to announce the pardon — which I’d REALLY like to see him do — at the first presidenti­al debate.

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Arizona Republic
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