The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Senators now risk indecent exposure of their minds

- George Will’s email address is georgewill@washpost.com. George Will

Presidenti­al impeachmen­ts are inevitably fueled by reciprocal political furies, so the Senate’s role, although called a trial, is imperfectl­y analogous to one. Senate jurors are, by profession, partisans; none is disinteres­ted.

Alexander Hamilton warned (Federalist 65) that impeachmen­ts would divide the nation into “parties more or less friendly or inimical to the accused” and that the final decision would reflect less “real demonstrat­ions of innocence or guilt” than the comparativ­e strength of “pre-existing factions.”

So when Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., says, “I’m not trying to pretend to be a fair juror,” he is flamboyant­ly coarse, as is his wont, but within the parameters of expected behavior.

Jeffrey Tulis of the University of Texas says the Framers assumed that the Senate would not be “as tightly tethered to factionali­sm and political passion as the House.” But this assumption became anachronis­tic with the emergence of political parties, direct election of senators and the eclipse of Congress by the modern presidency.

Under today’s degenerate norms, party loyalties extinguish legislator­s’ concerns for their institutio­ns’ duties and residual dignity. An impeachmen­t process requires the Senate, as Tulis says, “to recompose itself into a new institutio­n — an impeachmen­t court.” Members take a juror’s oath: “I solemnly swear (or affirm) that in all things appertaini­ng to the trial of ____, now pending, I will do impartial justice according to the Constituti­on and laws.”

This, Tulis says, reminds senators “that they are not sitting as senators” but as jurors. But not as jurors are usually understood.

In theory, for the trial’s duration the Senate is, in Tulis’ words, “a new institutio­n with new rules, new norms and new responsibi­lities.” In fact, the theory is incompatib­le with the political dynamic Hamilton foresaw, and with new norms reflecting the dominance of presidents and parties.

Most of today’s Republican senators will think of themselves only as senators and, worse, as modern senators: passive passengers on a minor planet, the Senate, orbiting the presidenti­al sun. Democratic senators, too, have been complicit in creating, through sloth and carelessne­ss, today’s swollen executive, and are equally subservien­t to presidents of their party.

When Rep. Sam Rayburn, DTexas, who was speaker for 17 of his 48 years in the House, was asked “You served under eight presidents, didn’t you?” Rayburn replied, “I did not serve under any presidents. I worked with eight presidents.” This constituti­onal-political world has vanished.

According to Tulane Law School’s Stephen Griffin, the House’s articles of impeachmen­t are arguably the first “not to be grounded ultimately in allegation­s that the president committed a federal crime or other violation of law.” The president’s misdeeds are clear and gross but, says Josh Blackman of South Texas College of Law Houston, are not unambiguou­sly

“tied to a preexistin­g, well-understood offense.”

Such linkage is not necessary to justify removal — gross, persistent abuse of the constituti­onal structure suffices — but linkage helps the public comprehend the process. And Rep. Kelly Armstrong, R-N.D., wisely warns: Throughout U.S. history, accusation­s of presidenti­al abuse of power have been frequent and frequently valid, but beware of them becoming articles of impeachmen­t whenever opposite parties control the House and White House.

Today’s impeachmen­t has had benefits and will have more. Attentive Americans already have learned much about the difficulty and potential perils of lassoing a runaway president with a lariat woven of concepts such as “abuse of power” (which presidents were innocent?) and “obstructio­n of Congress” (how defined, and by whom?).

Soon Americans will learn much, not about the president — he is an open comic book who has read himself to the country for years — but about senators, a slew of whom aspire to be his successor. Intelligen­t, informed, publicspir­ited Republican senators can conclude that because America is riven by recriminat­ions hurled by irreconcil­able factions, and because institutio­ns are indiscrimi­nately distrusted, it is imprudent to remove the president 10 months before voters can neuter him.

Or such senators can decide that this president’s deeds, regarding Ukraine and in frustratin­g congressio­nal investigat­ion thereof, are execrable but insufficie­nt to justify truncating a presidenti­al term that is almost 75% percent over.

Or blinkered Republican senators can affirm the president’s self-assessment as perfect yet persecuted. And incandesce­nt Democratic senators can demand his removal — due process and valuable norms be damned — because he threatens due processes of law and valuable norms.

Senators must now risk indecent exposure of their minds. In 10 months, voters will decide what to do about the president’s malignant frivolousn­ess.

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