Ever since Donald Trump fired James Comey, I’ve thought that there
was already enough evidence to justify impeaching and removing the
president — but we were well short of the evidence demanding
impeachment. We’re no longer “well short.” The evidence may not be
demanding Trump be removed from office … but it’s at least requesting it. Maybe firmly requesting it.
It’s
not just that we now also know that the president surrounded himself
with criminals (some of whom, remember, were also undeclared foreign
agents). Nor is it just that Michael Cohen says that Trump directed him
to commit a felony. Indeed, if all that Trump had done was to have
affairs and illegally pay hush money to cover it up, I’d argue that it
wasn’t really even close to enough for impeachment. Worse than what Bill
Clinton did, perhaps, in that Clinton merely lied about an affair, but
Clinton never should have been impeached.
No, what has really moved the needle on this is Trump’s constant
cheap gangster rhetoric and
flat-out unwillingness to support the rule of law. For example, it was
utterly inappropriate for the president of the United States to comment
during Paul Manifort’s trial, including while the jury was out. It
undermines the rule of law for the president to constantly run down the
Department of Justice, buying into wild and discredited conspiracy
theories about how everyone in the government is out to get him and his
associates.
It was outrageous for any president, much less one under investigation, to publicly go out of his way to
call John Dean a “rat”
for testifying accurately about Richard Nixon’s crimes. Trump’s pardons
to date, given to political allies or based on personal connections
outside of the normal procedures other presidents have used, were
already an abuse of power. Discussing a pardon for
Manafort with his personal attorneys,
and then making sure that conversation wound up in the media, is an
abuse as well, not to mention a form of obstruction of justice (because
the way to get someone with damaging information about the president to
stay silent is to offer or hint at future clemency, not to give one
now).
Or
take his constant complaint about Attorney General Jeff Sessions
recusing himself from the Russia investigation. Trump’s nonsensical
claim is that Sessions should have warned the president that he would
recuse himself if nominated and confirmed, in which case Trump wouldn’t
have offered him the job. But there was no investigation to recuse
himself from when Trump offered the job. And recusing merely puts a
different Trump nominee, Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, in
charge of the investigation. If Trump doesn’t like Rosenstein, fine. But
it was Trump’s decision for Rosenstein to be there at all.
But to
get to the heart of it: Sessions didn’t recuse himself for some random
reason. He did it because he was part of the campaign that is being
investigated. Trump mentioned that in
his Fox News interview that aired Thursday, saying: “He was on the campaign. He knows there was no collusion.” What
Trump is trying to do here is
to turn the principle behind recusal upside down. For him, Sessions is
especially qualified to take charge of the investigation
because he has a personal connection to it.
I
don’t even want to get into Trump whining about how the FBI treated
Manafort and Cohen like crooks by raiding them to seize evidence. Trump
is hardly alone in thinking that his (rich) friends shouldn’t be treated
as real criminals (
see Adam Serwer on that point), but again presidents are supposed to uphold equal justice under the law, not special favors for the well-connected.
All of this on top of "enemy of the people" and "lock her up" and more.
Perhaps it seems odd to say that those things — some crazy
tweet about John Dean, really? — are the stuff of a case for
impeachment. I disagree. Donald Trump is president. He has
responsibilities that comes with the job — for example to “take care
that the laws be faithfully executed.” He is responsible for upholding
democracy and the rule of law in the United States, and he is simply not
up to the task.
And that’s really what it comes down to — beyond
the abuses of power, beyond the obstruction of justice, beyond whatever
petty or grand specific crimes we already know about and whatever we
have yet to learn. Trump took an oath to “preserve, protect, and defend
the Constitution of the United States,” and he is proving utterly
unwilling to do so.
For this, he deserves to be impeached and
removed from office. I still don’t quite accept that it makes removal
absolutely necessary — so that it would be equally irresponsible for
Congress to fail to act. But we’re getting closer and closer to that
point.
1. At the Monkey Cage, John Sides has a
new poll showing Democratic advantages heading into the fall campaign season.
2 . Melissa Deckman and Shauna Shames at Mischiefs of Faction on where the energy is
among Democrats.
3. Perry Bacon Jr., reports that Republicans are
running on impeachment this year, but Democrats are not.
4. My Bloomberg Opinion colleague Ramesh Ponnuru on
Trump and perjury traps.
5. And Madi Alexander at Bloomberg Government on the
villain of Republican 2018 campaign commercials.
Source: Bloomberg
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