(Reuters) - Some U.S. lawmakers have said
President Donald Trump should be disqualified from holding political office
again following his impeachment on Wednesday for inciting a mob that stormed
the Capitol as lawmakers were certifying President-elect Joe Biden’s victory.
Now that the House has impeached Trump, the
Senate will hold a trial on whether to remove him and possibly bar him from
future office. Legal experts said disqualification could be accomplished
through the impeachment proceedings or the 14th Amendment of the U.S.
Constitution. Here is how the disqualification effort could play out.
CAN TRUMP’S DISQUALIFICATION BE ACCOMPLISHED
THROUGH IMPEACHMENT?
The U.S. Constitution says there are two ways
to punish an impeached official: removal from office or “disqualification to
hold and enjoy any office of honor, trust or profit under the United States.” The
House approved a single article of impeachment accusing Trump of inciting
insurrection when he delivered an incendiary speech to supporters shortly
before the pro-Trump mob rampaged the Capitol.
Trump is likely to argue at trial that his
remarks were free speech protected by the Constitution’s First Amendment and
that, while he told supporters to “fight,” he did not intend it as a literal
call to violence. Removing an official requires a “conviction” by a two-thirds
Senate majority under the Constitution. Under precedent, only a simple majority
is needed for disqualification. Historically, that vote only happens after a
conviction. Three federal officials in U.S. history have been disqualified
through impeachment proceedings. All three were federal judges.
Most recently, in 2010 the Senate removed and
disqualified from future office a Louisiana judge found to have engaged in
corruption. There is some debate over the scope of the disqualification clause
and whether it applies to the presidency, said Brian Kalt, a law professor at
Michigan State University.
Analyzing historical documents, some law
experts say the founders did not intend the presidency to be considered an
“office” under the disqualification clause, while others argue that the term
applies.
CAN TRUMP BE DISQUALIFIED IF HE IS NOT
CONVICTED BY THE SENATE?
This is uncharted legal territory, and there
is no clear answer, scholars said. Paul Campos, a professor of constitutional
law at the University of Colorado, said he believed a vote to disqualify Trump
can be held even if there are not enough votes for conviction. The U.S. Supreme
Court has made clear that the Senate has wide latitude to determine how it
conducts a trial, he said.
But Kalt said he thought disqualification
would require conviction first. To do otherwise would be the equivalent of
punishing the president for an offense he did not commit, Kalt said. All three
judges who were disqualified from office were first convicted.
WHAT ABOUT THE 14TH AMENDMENT?
Section 3 of the 14th Amendment provides an
alternative path for disqualification. The provision states that no person
shall hold office if they have engaged in “insurrection or rebellion” against
the United States. It was enacted following the Civil War to bar Confederates
from holding public office.
Under congressional precedent, only a simple
majority of both chambers is needed to invoke this penalty. Congress can later
remove the disqualification, but only if two-thirds of both houses vote in
favor of doing so.
In 1919, Congress used the 14th Amendment to
block an elected official, Victor Berger, from assuming his seat in the House
because he had actively opposed U.S. intervention in World War I. The text of
Section 3 of the 14th Amendment does not explain how it should be invoked.
Another section the 14th Amendment, Section 5,
empowers Congress to enforce the entire amendment through “appropriate
legislation.” Some scholars have interpreted this language to mean that a
majority of both chambers of Congress could enact a law applying a ban to a
particular president, like Trump.
“The 14th Amendment route is very unclear as
to what it would take to get it rolling,” said Kalt. “I think it would require
some combination of legislation and litigation.”
COULD TRUMP CHALLENGE A DISQUALIFICATION IN
COURT?
It is certainly possible, said Kalt. A Supreme
Court case from 1993 makes clear that the court is wary of second-guessing how
the Senate handles impeachment. In that case, involving an accused judge, the
court said whether the Senate had properly tried an impeachment was a political
question and could not be litigated.
If Trump is disqualified, the current Supreme
Court might want to clarify whether the move was lawful, Kalt said. Trump
appointed three of the Supreme Court’s nine members: Justices Neil Gorsuch,
Brett Kavanaugh and most recently Amy Coney Barrett. The court now has a
six-judge conservative majority. “If you are going to say someone can’t run,
you want to get that litigated and settled sooner rather than later,” Kalt
said.
Reporting by Jan
Wolfe; Editing by Noeleen Walder and Aurora Ellis
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