Tuesday
morning, a federal appeals court in Washington, DC, told Donald
Trump to get lost. That is, it rejected his claim that as a former president he
has total immunity for actions he took while in the White House. Trump had
cooked up this argument to challenge the indictment filed against him by
special counsel Jack Smith, who hit Trump with four charges for illegally
trying to overturn the 2020 election.
The
long-awaited 57-page ruling issued
by the three-judge panel is not full of fiery rhetoric. But it does contain a
few sharp punches aimed at Trump’s contention that a president should possess
king-like power. Here are some excerpts.
The
court said Trump has no special standing as a former president:
“For the purpose of this criminal case, former President
Trump has become citizen Trump, with all of the defenses of any other criminal
defendant. But any executive immunity that may have protected him while he
served as President no longer protects him against this prosecution.”
Trump argued that
potential prosecution in the future could chill presidential action. The court
said, no way:
“Former President Trump argues that criminal liability for
former Presidents risks chilling Presidential action while in office and
opening the floodgates to meritless and harassing prosecution. These risks do
not overcome ‘the public interest in fair and accurate judicial proceedings,’
which ‘is at its height in the criminal setting.’”
The court had a bit of a
ha-ha moment, which many legal observers anticipated, when it pointed out that
Trump’s lawyers had argued during his last impeachment that his actions related
to the 2020 election were not impeachable and that the appropriate venue for
judging them would be a courtroom. Gotcha, said the court:
“‘[During] President Trump’s 2021 impeachment proceedings
for incitement of insurrection, his counsel argued that instead of
post-Presidency impeachment, the appropriate vehicle for ‘investigation,
prosecution, and punishment’ is ‘the article III courts,’ as ‘[w]e have a
judicial process’ and ‘an investigative process . . . to which no former
officeholder is immune.’”
Trump said that without
total immunity, former presidents would be mercilessly harassed. Unlikely, said
the court, you’re the only president to be federally indicted:
“[F]ormer
President Trump’s ‘predictive judgment’ of a torrent of politically motivated
prosecutions ‘finds little support in either history or the relatively narrow
compass of the issues raised in this particular case,’ see
Clinton, 520 U.S. at 702, as former President Trump acknowledges
that this is the first time since the Founding that a former President has been
federally indicted. Weighing these factors, we conclude that the risk that
former Presidents will be unduly harassed by meritless federal criminal
prosecutions appears slight.”
The
court noted that Trump’s position made no sense. How could the guy in charge of
enforcing the law be above it?
“It would be a striking paradox if the President, who alone is
vested with the constitutional duty to ‘take Care that the Laws be faithfully
executed,’ were the sole officer capable of defying those laws with impunity.”
What
also doesn’t make sense, the court said, was a policy that would allow a
president to break laws just to overturn an election and stay in power.
That could be the end of democracy:
“We cannot accept former President Trump’s claim that a
President has unbounded authority to commit crimes that would neutralize the
most fundamental check on executive power—the recognition and implementation of
election results. Nor can we sanction his apparent contention that the
Executive has carte blanche to violate the rights of individual citizens to
vote and to have their votes count.”
On
the last page of its ruling, the court suggested that Trump’s argument
threatens the entire constitutional order and, if adopted, could destroy the
republic.
“At bottom, former President Trump’s stance would collapse our
system of separated powers by placing the President beyond the reach of all
three Branches. Presidential immunity against federal indictment would mean
that, as to the President, the Congress could not legislate, the Executive
could not prosecute and the Judiciary could not review. We cannot accept that
the office of the Presidency places its former occupants above the law for all
time thereafter.”
Bottom
line: Not on our watch, the court declared.
-Mother
Jones
Mother Jones was founded as a
nonprofit in 1976 because we knew corporations and billionaires wouldn't fund
the type of hard-hitting journalism we set out to do.
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