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Analysis
In
Pardoning His Son, Biden Echoes Some of Trump’s Complaints
President
Biden complained about selective prosecution and political pressure in a system
he has spent his public life defending.
Peter Baker
By Peter
Baker
Peter Baker
is the chief White House correspondent and has covered the past five
presidents, including President Biden.
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/12/01/us/politics/biden-hunter-pardon-politics.html
Dec. 1, 2024
President
Biden and President-elect Donald J. Trump now agree on one thing: The Biden
Justice Department has been politicized.
In pardoning
his son Hunter Biden on Sunday night, the incumbent president sounded a lot
like his successor by complaining about selective prosecution and political
pressure, questioning the fairness of a system that Mr. Biden had until now
long defended.
“No
reasonable person who looks at the facts of Hunter’s cases can reach any other
conclusion than Hunter was singled out only because he is my son — and that is
wrong,” Mr. Biden said in a statement announcing the pardon. “Here’s the
truth,” he added. “I believe in the justice system, but as I have wrestled with
this, I also believe raw politics has infected this process and it led to a
miscarriage of justice.”
Mr. Biden’s
decision to use the extraordinary power of executive clemency to wipe out his
son’s convictions on gun and tax charges came despite repeated statements by
him and his aides that he would not do so. Just this past summer, after his son
was convicted at trial, the president rejected the idea of a pardon and said
that “I will accept the outcome of this case and will continue to respect the
judicial process.” The statement he issued on Sunday night made clear he did
not accept the outcome or respect the process.
The pardon
and Mr. Biden’s stated rationale for granting it will inevitably muddy the
political waters as Mr. Trump prepares to take office with plans to use the
Justice Department and F.B.I. to pursue “retribution” against his political
adversaries. Mr. Trump has long argued that the justice system has been
“weaponized” against him and that he is the victim of selective prosecution,
much the way Mr. Biden has now said his son was.
Their
arguments are, of course, different in important respects. Mr. Trump contends
that the two indictments against him by Mr. Biden’s Justice Department amounted
to a partisan witch hunt targeting the sitting president’s main rival. Mr.
Biden did not explicitly accuse the Justice Department of being biased against
his family, but suggested that it was influenced by Republican politicians who
have waged a long public campaign assailing Hunter Biden.
As it
happens, the Justice Department has rejected both accusations. The prosecutions
of Mr. Trump and the younger Mr. Biden were each handled by separate special
counsels appointed specifically to insulate the cases from politics, and senior
department officials have denied that politics entered the equation against
either man. There is no evidence that Mr. Biden had any involvement in Mr.
Trump’s cases.
But Mr.
Biden’s pardon will make it harder for Democrats to defend the integrity of the
Justice Department and stand against Mr. Trump’s unapologetic plans to use it
for political purposes even as he seeks to install Kash Patel, an adviser who
has vowed to “come after” the president-elect’s enemies, as the next director
of the F.B.I. It will also be harder for Democrats to criticize Mr. Trump for
his prolific use of the pardon power to absolve friends and allies, some of
whom could have been witnesses against him in previous investigations.
“While as a
father I certainly understand President @JoeBiden’s natural desire to help his
son by pardoning him, I am disappointed that he put his family ahead of the
country,” Gov. Jared Polis of Colorado, a Democrat, wrote on social media.
“This is a bad precedent that could be abused by later presidents and will
sadly tarnish his reputation.”
Representative
Greg Stanton, Democrat of Arizona, disputed the president’s argument that
politics was behind his son’s prosecution. “I respect President Biden, but I
think he got this one wrong,” he said online. “This wasn’t a
politically-motivated prosecution. Hunter committed felonies, and was convicted
by a jury of his peers.”
Other
Democrats tried to draw a distinction between the Biden and Trump matters.
Former Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. said that no prosecutor would have
brought the charges against Hunter Biden and that therefore the pardon was
warranted.
“Ask
yourself a vastly more important question,” he wrote on social media. “Do you
really think Kash Patel is qualified to lead the world’s preeminent law
enforcement investigative organization? Obvious answer: hell no.”
To be sure,
the cases against Mr. Trump and the younger Mr. Biden are hardly comparable.
Mr. Trump was charged with illegally trying to overturn an election that he
lost so that he could hold on to power and, in a separate indictment, with
endangering national security and trying to obstruct justice by taking
classified documents when he left office and refusing to return them. Those
cases are now being dropped because of his election.
Hunter Biden
was convicted of lying on a firearms application form about his drug addiction
and pleaded guilty to failing to pay taxes that he later did pay, with
penalties. At least some legal experts have agreed with the president’s
contention that such offenses would normally have been resolved without felony
charges.
But the
president broke his own commitment about intervening in the case. In his
statement, he noted that he had said he would “not interfere with the Justice
Department’s decision-making and I kept my word even as I have watched my son
being selectively, and unfairly, prosecuted.” He did not acknowledge that he
did not keep his word about forgoing a pardon.
Mr. Trump
wasted little time seizing on the pardon to make apples-and-oranges
comparisons. “Does the Pardon given by Joe to Hunter include the J-6 Hostages,
who have now been imprisoned for years?” he wrote on social media, referring to
the rioters who attacked the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, to stop Congress from
certifying Mr. Trump’s defeat. “Such an abuse and miscarriage of Justice!”
Mr. Biden’s
pardon will also give ammunition to Republicans who have contended that Hunter
Biden was guilty of wrongdoing beyond the charges for which he was actually
prosecuted. A House Republican investigation made clear that the president’s
son traded on his father’s name in business, but never proved that the elder
Mr. Biden took action as vice president or president to benefit Hunter.
The pardon
Mr. Biden issued to his son specifically covers any offenses “which he has
committed or may have committed or taken part in during the period from Jan. 1,
2014, through Dec. 1, 2024,” not just the tax and gun charges. That will
protect Hunter Biden from any further investigation that Mr. Trump could have
ordered the Justice Department or Mr. Patel’s F.B.I. to conduct once taking
office.
But
Republicans seized on it to say that the unlimited decade-long sweep of the
pardon demonstrated that there must be more there to protect him from.
“The charges
Hunter faced were just the tip of the iceberg in the blatant corruption that
President Biden and the Biden Crime Family have lied about to the American
people,” said Representative James R. Comer of Kentucky, the Republican
committee chairman who led the G.O.P. investigation. “It’s unfortunate that,
rather than come clean about their decades of wrongdoing, President Biden and
his family continue to do everything they can to avoid accountability.”
Some
Republicans even imagined ways the pardon could help any future investigation
of the outgoing president. David M. Friedman, a longtime Trump lawyer who
served as ambassador to Israel in his first term, suggested online that Hunter
Biden could now be compelled to testify about matters for which he no longer
faces potential criminal liability.
“This means
that Hunter cannot plead the Fifth if asked about his business dealings with
Ukraine and China, including his Dad’s involvement, because, with his pardon,
he has no risk of criminal jeopardy,” Mr. Friedman wrote.
Other
presidents have used the pardon power on their way out of office to help people
close to them. President George H.W. Bush pardoned former Defense Secretary
Caspar W. Weinberger and other colleagues on charges stemming from the
Iran-contra affair. President Bill Clinton pardoned his brother Roger on old
drug charges.
And of
course, the vast majority of Mr. Trump’s pardons and commutations went to
people he knew personally or was connected to through allies, according to
studies. Among the people he pardoned in his last weeks in office was Charles
Kushner, the father of Mr. Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner who spent two years
in prison on tax evasion and other charges. Over the weekend, Mr. Trump
announced that he would now nominate the pardoned Mr. Kushner to be ambassador
to France.
In his
pardon statement, Mr. Biden sought to appeal to empathy for a father of a son
who struggled with drug addiction, framing his decision in personal terms as
Hunter faced possibly years in prison. “I hope Americans will understand why a
father and a president would come to this decision,” he wrote.
If he had
left it at that, that might have been one thing. But it was his attack on the
prosecution that raised questions of a dual-track justice system. “There has
been an effort to break Hunter — who has been five and a half years sober, even
in the face of unrelenting attacks and selective prosecution,” the president
said. “In trying to break Hunter, they’ve tried to break me — and there’s no
reason to believe it will stop here. Enough is enough.”
Except that
it will not stop here. Even some supporters of Mr. Biden said his decision
opened the door for Mr. Trump to further warp the system by pointing to his
predecessor’s own words and actions. Former Representative Joe Walsh, a leading
anti-Trump Republican from Illinois who endorsed Mr. Biden for president, said
the pardon was “deflating.”
“This just
furthers the cynicism that people have about politics,” he said on MSNBC, “and
that cynicism strengthens Trump because Trump can just say: ‘I’m not a unique
threat. Everybody does this. If I do something for my kid, my son-in-law, look,
Joe Biden does the same thing.’ I get it, but this was a selfish move by Biden
which politically only strengthens Trump.”
Peter Baker
is the chief White House correspondent for The Times. He has covered the last
five presidents and sometimes writes analytical pieces that place presidents
and their administrations in a larger context and historical framework. More
about Peter Baker
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