NEWS
ANALYSIS
A President Faces Prosecution, and a Democracy Is
Tested
For more than two centuries, American presidents were
effectively shielded from indictment. But the case against former President
Donald J. Trump breaks that taboo and sets a new precedent.
Peter Baker
By Peter
Baker
Peter Baker
has covered the last five presidents. He reported from Washington.
March 30,
2023
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/03/30/us/politics/trump-indictment-democracy.html
For the
first time in American history, a former president of the United States has
been indicted on criminal charges. It is worth pausing to repeat that: An
American president has been indicted for a crime for the first time in history.
So many
unthinkable firsts have occurred since Donald J. Trump was elected to the White
House in 2016, so many inviolable lines have been crossed, so many unimaginable
events have shocked the world that it is easy to lose sight of just how
astonishing this particular moment really is.
For all of
the focus on the tawdry details of the case or its novel legal theory or its
political impact, the larger story is of a country heading down a road it has
never traveled before, one fraught with profound consequences for the health of
the world’s oldest democracy. For more than two centuries, presidents have been
held on a pedestal, even the ones swathed in scandal, declared immune from
prosecution while in office and, effectively, even afterward.
No longer.
That taboo has been broken. A new precedent has been set. Will it tear the
country apart, as some feared about putting a former president on trial after
Watergate? Will it be seen by many at home and abroad as victor’s justice akin
to developing nations where former leaders are imprisoned by their successors?
Or will it become a moment of reckoning, a sign that even someone who was once
the most powerful person on the planet is not above the law?
“Whether
the indictment is warranted or not, it crosses a huge line in American politics
and American legal history,” said Jack L. Goldsmith, a Harvard Law professor
and former top Justice Department official under President George W. Bush.
If that
were not enough to shake the timbers of the republic, the first may not be the
last. Mr. Trump could face a second indictment in Georgia and a third from
federal prosecutors and potentially even a fourth.
There is
consternation that the barrier-shattering indictment would involve something as
unseemly as paying hush money to cover up a sexual romp. Given that the
defendant has been involved in far more earth-shattering events like trying to
overturn an election and inspiring an attack on the Capitol to prevent the
transfer of power, the allegations by Manhattan prosecutors seem less than
epochal.
But if the
issue is accountability, then the case could redraw the lines and make it less
daunting for prosecutors in Georgia and Washington to follow suit by charging
more serious crimes if they have the evidence, since they will not have to bear
the burden of justifying action never taken before. Leave it to the only
president ever impeached in Congress twice to face so many prosecutions that
lawyers need a scorecard just to keep track.
While the
indictment of Mr. Trump takes the country into uncharted waters, the authors of
the Constitution might have been surprised only that it took so long. Justice
Department policy maintains that sitting presidents cannot be indicted, but the
framers explicitly contemplated the prospect of them being charged after
leaving office.
A president
impeached by the House and convicted and removed from office by the Senate
“shall nevertheless be liable and subject to indictment, trial, judgment and
punishment, according to law,” Article I, Section 3 of the Constitution
declares.
“Generally,
we consider that language to suggest that, whatever may happen with respect to
an impeachment while a president is in office, he still may be held liable
civilly or criminally after he leaves office for his misconduct in office,”
said Michael J. Gerhardt, a constitutional law professor at the University of
North Carolina.
In other
words, no former president was immune from criminal liability. “The framers
would have been horrified at the possibility of a president ever being above
the law while in office or after leaving it,” Mr. Gerhardt said.
Indeed,
while voting to acquit Mr. Trump at his second impeachment trial — the one
charging him with inciting the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol — Senator
Mitch McConnell, the Republican leader from Kentucky, said he did so because
Mr. Trump was no longer in office but added that he was still subject to
criminal prosecution.
“My view is
that so long as the case that is brought is for a crime that is not unusual to
charge, and the proof is also as strong as one would normally have — i.e. that
one wards against the problem of selective prosecution — then it is imperative
that we hold politicians to account regardless of what position they hold or
held,” said Andrew Weissmann, a deputy to Robert S. Mueller III, the special
counsel who investigated the Trump campaign’s ties to Russia.
Meena Bose,
who is the executive dean of Hofstra University’s Peter S. Kalikow School of
Government and runs a presidential history project, said that a country plagued
by polarization and concerns about democracy would be stronger by enforcing
responsibility on its leaders. “An active and continuing commitment to making
sure all public officials follow the rule of law is essential to addressing
those challenges,” she said.
But others
worry about the long-term consequences for the presidency, not least because
this indictment is being brought by a local prosecutor rather than the Justice
Department, opening the door to prosecutors around the country taking it upon
themselves to go after a president.
“This
presents the opportunity for potentially thousands of state and local
prosecutors to investigate and charge a president without the impediment
imposed by D.O.J.’s policy against indicting sitting presidents,” said Stanley
M. Brand, a former House counsel whose firm represents a couple of Trump
associates in the investigation into the mishandling of classified documents.
“It theoretically subjugates the presidency in a way I don’t believe was ever
constitutionally contemplated.”
Mr.
Goldsmith said any prosecution could tear at the fabric of the system.
“Especially if this indictment is followed by even a justified indictment from
the special counsel, we will see recriminations and retributions in the medium
term, all to the detriment of our political national health,” he said.
Mr. Trump’s
allies branded the Manhattan case political even before any indictment without
waiting to review the actual evidence. Whatever Alvin L. Bragg, the district
attorney, turned up was immaterial — to defend their party’s most recent
president, and possible next nominee, they preemptively declared the
prosecution illegitimate because it was brought by a Democrat.
Representative
Mark E. Green, Republican of Tennessee and the chairman of the House Homeland
Security Committee, compared any prosecution of Mr. Trump to political cases in
less developed countries. “Daniel Ortega arrested his opposition in Nicaragua
and we call that a horrible thing,” he said last week. “Mr. Biden, Mr.
President, think about that.”
Locking up
former leaders on specious, politically driven charges may be common in the
world’s autocracies, but some of the most advanced democracies have not shied
away from putting their leaders on trial for crimes. In Israel, former Prime
Minister Ehud Olmert spent more than a year in prison for bribery, fraud and
other charges while the incumbent prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, is
currently on trial on similar charges.
In Italy,
former Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, who just regained some power as part
of a governing coalition, has faced 35 criminal court cases during his long
career, although he was definitively convicted just once for tax fraud and
sentenced to a year of community service. Just last month, he was acquitted on
charges of bribing witnesses at a previous underage prostitution trial.
Other
leaders of democratic nations convicted in recent years include former
Presidents Jacques Chirac (embezzlement) and Nicolas Sarkozy (influence
peddling) in France, former President Park Geun-hye (corruption) in South Korea
and former President Chen Shui-bian (bribery) in Taiwan.
In the
United States, Teapot Dome, Watergate, Iran-contra and Whitewater never put a
president in the dock. The only sitting president to see the inside of a police
station as a defendant was Ulysses S. Grant, who was stopped for speeding down
the streets of Washington in his horse-drawn carriage. He paid $20 and went on
his way.
While no
president has ever been indicted before, an early vice president, Aaron Burr,
was put on trial for treason after leaving office for plotting to carve off
Western territories into a new country, although he was acquitted. Nearly two
centuries later, another vice president, Spiro T. Agnew, resigned amid a plea
deal in a corruption case.
Mr. Trump
would not be barred from running for his old office by an indictment or even a
conviction. In 1920, Eugene V. Debs, the Socialist leader, mounted his fifth
bid for the White House from prison, where he was serving time for his
opposition to World War I. He received 919,799 votes, or 3.4 percent of those
cast. Of course, unlike Mr. Trump, he was not a major-party candidate and had
no prospects of winning.
At least a
couple other presidents worried about being indicted after office. Richard M.
Nixon was pardoned by his successor, Gerald R. Ford, a month after resigning,
sparing him any prosecution in the Watergate scandal. Bill Clinton struck a
deal with Whitewater prosecutors on his last full day in office in which he
admitted providing false testimony under oath about his affair with Monica S.
Lewinsky, gave up his law license for five years and paid a $25,000 fine in
exchange for not facing charges as a private citizen.
In
pardoning Mr. Nixon, Mr. Ford was not trying to set a precedent barring future
prosecutions of a president, said the historian Richard Norton Smith, whose
biography of Mr. Ford, “An Ordinary Man,” will be published next month.
Instead, he was trying to move the country beyond Watergate as he confronted
challenges like inflation, the last vestiges of the Vietnam War and deep public
cynicism.
“He wasn’t
forgiving Nixon so much as he was trying to forget him,” Mr. Smith said. “That
is, to counter the popular, political and media obsession that, quite
understandably, had formed around the previously unthinkable concept of an
American president facing jail time. And the existence of which prevented him
from doing his job or the American people from moving on to confront all the
problems that Nixon left behind him.”
That
decision, he added, should not mean that Mr. Trump is handed a
get-out-of-jail-free card due to Mr. Ford. “It seems more than a little unfair
to make him a scapegoat for the wrongdoing of subsequent presidents,” Mr. Smith
said. “As he himself warned in 1980, if voters ever chose an arrogant president
‘and I mean in a vicious way — God help the country.’”
Peter Baker
is the chief White House correspondent and has covered the last five presidents
for The Times and The Washington Post. He is the author of seven books, most
recently “The Divider: Trump in the White House, 2017-2021,” with Susan
Glasser. @peterbakernyt • Facebook
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