Times-Herald

Former President Donald Trump’s last-minute pardons

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In one of his last acts as president Donald J. Trump again exercised his constituti­onal authority to "grant reprieves and pardons for offenses against the United States" in an irresponsi­ble and offensive way — fortunatel­y for the last time.

The way he has used the pardon power to benefit cronies, political allies and the father of his son-in-law underlines just how expansive that power is — and why Trump's successor must be pressed, including by Congress, to exercise it impartiall­y.

As he has done in the past, Trump extended clemency to some deserving recipients, including nonviolent drug offenders. But there were also grants of clemency that favored people with ties to the president or the Republican Party.

Most egregiousl­y, Trump pardoned his longtime advisor Stephen K. Bannon, who had been charged with fraud and money laundering in an alleged scheme to swindle supporters of Trump's border wall. The pardon for Bannon follows Trump's previous pardons of self-described "dirty trickster" Roger Stone, former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort and former National Security Advisor Michael Flynn, who pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI.

Trump also pardoned several politician­s convicted of corruption charges, including former Republican Reps. Randy "Duke" Cunningham of Rancho Santa Fe, Rick Renzi of Arizona and Robin Hayes of North Carolina, adding to the list of disgraced former office holders whom Trump has favored. Also pardoned was major Republican fundraiser Elliott Broidy, who'd pleaded guilty to unregister­ed lobbying on behalf of foreign interests seeking to end a federal investigat­ion into the 1MDB investment scandal.

The new grants of clemency were notable for what they didn't include: an arguably unconstitu­tional attempt by Trump to pardon himself. That may reflect less a sudden case of scruples than a fear that such an outrageous act would alienate senators who will sit as the jury in Trump's second impeachmen­t trial.

Other presidents have abused the pardon power. In 1992 George H. W. Bush pardoned former Secretary of Defense Caspar Weinberger, who faced perjury charges arising from the Iran-Contra scandal. On his last day in office in 2000, President Bill Clinton pardoned Marc Rich, a fugitive financier whose former wife had made large donations to Democrats and the Clinton library. That pardon prompted a congressio­nal investigat­ion.

But Trump is in a contemptib­le class by himself in the way he has used this power. Last July, in response to Trump's decision to commute Stone's sentence — the first of two times Trump used his power to benefit his longtime friend — House Speaker Nancy Pelosi proposed that Congress enact legislatio­n preventing to ensure that "no president can pardon or commute the sentence of an individual who is engaged in a cover-up campaign to shield that president from criminal prosecutio­n."

That idea raised constituti­onal issues, given the expansive authority the Constituti­on affords the president in the exercise of clemency. But later House Democrats proposed legislatio­n that would sensibly require the Department of Justice and the White House to provide Congress with materials about "any self-serving presidenti­al pardon or commutatio­n in cases involving the president or his/her relatives, contempt of Congress, or obstructio­n of Congress." ( The proposal also would have banned presidenti­al self-pardons.)

Most presidents won't pervert the conduct of their office the way Trump did. But the almost limitless scope of the pardon power obligates presidents to treat it as an instrument of impartial mercy, not as a personal perk.

Trump allowed personal and political favoritism to taint a constituti­onal power that should be exercised for the greater good. Beginning with Biden, his successors must do better.

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