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Impeachable Offenses?

~ The Use & Abuse of Impeachment in the 21st Century

Impeachable Offenses?

Tag Archives: impeachable offenses

Limiting the Removal Power

28 Monday May 2018

Posted by crosbysamuel in Articles, Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

appointment, Comey, Congress, director, FBI, hamlin, impeachable offenses, Impeachment, limit, power, removal, trump

Qualified Tenure: Presidential Removal of the FBI Director is an article written by Leah A. Hamlin which was published in the Ohio Northern University Law Review. It addresses the question of whether the President’s power to remove an FBI director is limited by the 10-year term instituted by Congress, and whether it may, constitutionally, be further limited by Congress. Hamlin ultimately concludes:

that the ten-year term does not limit the president’s ability to remove the director at will, and that, given the importance of the FBI director to the effective functioning of a unitary executive, Congress may not limit the president’s removal power without infringing on the separation of powers limits laid out in case law.

This question is especially significant, of course, in light of the firing of James Comey which was met with such outrage, and which some believe could constitute obstruction of justice.  Though Hamlin concludes that Congress cannot not interfere with the President’s removal power, it is doubtful that her conclusion would extend so far as to suggest that Congress could not wield its impeachment power in wake of a removal which constitutes a high crime or misdemeanor.

gettyimages-694398560.jpgThe Washington Post/Getty Images

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Impeachment in the states: Missouri governor edition, Part I

19 Friday Jan 2018

Posted by impeachableoffenses in Uncategorized

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Alexander Hamilton, Governor Greitens, Greitens, Greitens impeachment, impeachable offenses, Missouri state impeachment, state impeachment

By Frank Bowman

Here in the Show-Me State, we have been granted a temporary reprieve from the feverish national focus on all things Trump by news of the sexual peccadillos of our recently-elected governor, Eric Greitens. As has now been reported across the nation, on Wednesday, January 10, shortly after his State of the State address, Governor Greitens released a statement admitting to a extramarital sexual affair with his former hairdresser back in 2015.

The admission came in anticipation of impending media reports alleging not only that there were one or more sexual encounters between the hairdresser and Mr. Greitens, but that on one occasion Mr. Greitens took a picture of the woman while she was bound and in a state of full or partial undress and then threatened to release the picture publicly if she were ever to speak about the affair. The reports were made all the juicier by the fact that the woman’s former husband secretly recorded her tearful confession to the affair and released the recording to the media.

In his statement, Mr. Greitens admitted the sex, but denied that he had either taken a picture of the woman en déshabillé or threatened to release such a picture to maintain her silence.

Political reaction to these revelations has been swift and somewhat surprisingly severe given that Mr. Greitens is a first-term Republican governor often touted as a rising political star in a state where Republicans hold all but one state-wide office and supermajorities in both houses of the legislature. Democrats immediately called for Mr. Greitens’ resignation, as have multiple Republican legislators. Even Republicans who haven’t gone that far seem, at best, to be withholding judgment pending the outcome of a criminal investigation by the St. Louis Circuit Attorney (and possibly one by the FBI).  One Republican state senator, Gary Romine, said that if investigations into Mr. Greitens’ behavior do not exonerate him, he should “resign or face impeachment.”

Naturally, as soon as I read the word “impeachment,” I perked up like a foxhound when the Master of the Hunt yells “Talley Ho!”  What follows is a two-part look at the law governing impeachment of Missouri state officials, a comparison of Missouri law to federal practice, and a preview of the particular issues an effort to impeach Mr. Greitens would present given the current state of the evidence.

Impeachment in Missouri

Article VII, Sections 1 and 2 of the Missouri constitution state:

Section 1. All elective executive officials of the state, and judges of the supreme court, courts of appeals and circuit courts shall be liable to impeachment for crimes, misconduct, habitual drunkenness, willful neglect of duty, corruption in office, incompetency, or any offense involving moral turpitude or oppression in office.

Section 2. The house of representatives shall have the sole power of impeachment. All impeachments shall be tried before the supreme court, except that the governor or a member of the supreme court shall be tried by a special commission of seven eminent jurists to be elected by the senate. The supreme court or special commission shall take an oath to try impartially the person impeached, and no person shall be convicted without the concurrence of five-sevenths of the court or special commission.

The most obvious difference between federal and state impeachment procedure is that, while in both systems the house of representatives impeaches the officer, i.e., specifies the charges against the accused, in Missouri the state supreme court, rather than the senate, tries the case. That is, the Missouri Supreme Court, not the Missouri senate, decides whether the allegations in the bill of impeachment are proven and thus whether the officer ought to be removed.  The way the Missouri Supreme Court has interpreted its function materially alters the Missouri impeachment process.

In the federal system, the president may be impeached for serious crimes (although there is disagreement about which ones) and for very serious non-criminal misconduct either in relation to the office or of a personal sort that undermines the president’s legitimacy. Most scholars would agree that, under the federal constitution, the president ought not be impeached for minor crimes (and perhaps not even for serious crimes like perjury if unrelated to his official duties) or for laziness, ineptitude, or pursuing political objectives contrary to those of the legislative majority.

Critically, all informed observers of the federal impeachment process agree that both the decision by the House about which behavior is impeachable and the subsequent decision by Senate about whether to convict and remove the accused are to a significant degree “political.”  As Alexander Hamilton famously said in Federalist #65, impeachable offenses “are of a nature which may with peculiar propriety be denominated POLITICAL, as they relate chiefly to injuries done immediately to the society itself.”

The concededly political character of the federal impeachment process shapes the essential nature of the decision-making process.  Both the House and Senate are called upon not merely to decide the truth of factual allegations against the president, but to judge whether the conduct is of a nature that merits removal of the nation’s chief executive officer.  The second choice is a political judgment which the Framers consciously placed in the hands of two political bodies.

The Missouri constitution originally consigned the trial of impeachments to the state senate.  But in the 1940’s (perhaps in response to a case where the senate refused to convict a former senator whose factual guilt was patent), the constitution was amended to institute the present arrangement assigning impeachment trials to the state supreme court. The apparent purpose of the change was to eliminate politics from the last stage of the impeachment process, but as is so often true, this benevolent-sounding objective created a new complication.

In theory, courts are not supposed to be political bodies.  In theory, they are limited to deciding what the law is, whether facts are proven, and whether proven facts fall within the ambit of the law. Of course, any serious student of courts realizes that politics in the broad sense affects judicial decisions at every level. Judges unavoidably bring their own philosophical predilections to deciding both law and facts, and perhaps more importantly, common law judging has always had a public policy component.  Nonetheless, judges traditionally shun explicitly political judgments – such as whether removal of a particular executive branch official would or would not be beneficial to the commonweal.

This judicial discomfort manifested itself in the only Missouri impeachment case to arise after the constitution was amended to give the responsibility of trying impeachments to the supreme court. The case, Matter of Impeachment of Judith K. Moriarty, 902 S.W.2d 273 (1994), arose from the impeachment of the Missouri Secretary of State for “knowingly allow[ing] the signature of her son as candidate or of her administrative aide or both to be placed on an unsigned declaration of candidacy [for public office] so that declaration falsely declared that the son had appeared in presence of aide to declare for office within the time provided for by statute.”

The Missouri Supreme Court found that Ms. Moriarty did what the articles of impeachment charged, thus removing her from office. The interesting part is the court’s explanation of its role in the impeachment process. The court began by contrasting the traditional impeachment system in which the house impeaches and the senate tries the accused with the Missouri system of trial by supreme court:

An impeachment is thus a judgment by the House of Representatives—one of the popularly-elected, representative bodies of the people’s General Assembly—that an officer of the state has committed acts such that, were an election held, the people would not permit the impeached officeholder to remain in office. When a Senate determines whether to convict under articles of impeachment, the vote affirms or rejects the judgment of the House. Under this system, the possibility exists that the House may impeach and the Senate may convict an official for purely political reasons, though they clothe their charges with constitutional language like “misconduct.”

Missouri’s constitutional provision is a clear acknowledgment that the trial of impeachment charges is essentially judicial in character and is not a political function. This Court can convict only where there is actual misconduct as the law defines it. “Misconduct” means doing an unlawful act, doing a lawful act in an unlawful manner, or failing to perform an act required by law. It does not include errors in judgment, acts done in good faith, or good faith exercise of discretion.

This passage is remarkable in several respects.

First, it offers a distorted interpretation of the standard for defining an impeachable offense in federal and state systems in which legislators both formulate and try the articles of impeachment. The court opines that in such systems legislators are supposed to engage in a sort of mass mind-reading exercise assessing the probable electoral reaction of the public to the charged conduct. I confess to thinking this assessment misguided. In the federal system, at least, it is quite clear that senators are intended to exercise independent judgment, and that they should not decline to convict an office holder merely because they think the public might re-elect him despite constitutionally obnoxious conduct.  Were that the case, no demagogue could ever be impeached so long as he retained the probable support of the mob.

Moreover, when the Missouri court disparages senate impeachment trials on the ground that an officeholder may be convicted “for purely political reasons,” it betrays a crabbed and historically inaccurate view of what Founders like Hamilton meant by “political.”  For Hamilton and others of his generation, the term “political” ran far beyond narrowly partisan considerations to broad considerations of constitutional balance and societal good.  For them, impeachment was “political” because it demanded the exercise of sound judgment about whether removing a particular officer for particular conduct protected or disserved republican government.

More important from Governor Greitens’ standpoint is the court’s holding that, because judges and not legislators try Missouri impeachments, there can be a conviction only:

… where there is actual misconduct as the law defines it. ‘Misconduct’ means doing an unlawful act, doing a lawful act in an unlawful manner, or failing to perform an act required by law. It does not include errors in judgment, acts done in good faith, or good faith exercise of discretion.

This is huge because it markedly narrows the definition of impeachable conduct.  Indeed, the result is to judicially amend the Missouri constitution.  Recall that Article VII, Section 1 of the Missouri constitution says that officials may be impeached for “crimes, misconduct, habitual drunkenness, willful neglect of duty, corruption in office, incompetency, or any offense involving moral turpitude or oppression in office.”

Some of the items on this list obviously do refer to illegal conduct, notably “crimes … corruption in office, [and] any offense involving moral turpitude or oppression in office.” On the other hand, the constitutional text pretty plainly contemplates impeachment for lots of behavior that violates no other law. For example, neither “habitual drunkenness” nor “incompetency” is illegal.  Nor is either “willful neglect of duty” or “misconduct” necessarily a legal infraction.

To maintain its preferred self-conception of non-political arbiter of facts, the Missouri Supreme Court imposed a limiting construction on the constitutional term “misconduct” that requires the impeached official to have violated some other law.  (For you law geeks in the audience, it does so by the extremely dubious expedient of adopting its definition of “misconduct” from a Tennessee case construing the common law crime of “official misconduct,” an offense which exists nowhere in Missouri law.” Mid–South Indoor Horse Racing, Inc. v. Tennessee State Racing Commission,798 S.W.2d 531, 538 (Tenn.App.1990).)

Notably, the laws the Court found Ms. Moriarty to have violated were simply statutory rules for proper filing of candidacy for office.  Failing to perform the duties prescribed in these sections was apparently chargeable as a misdemeanor (perhaps under RSMo 115.641).  Moreover, it appears that, prior to the impeachment proceeding, Ms. Moriarty was charged in Cole County and convicted of such a misdemeanor for her conduct.  But curiously, the Missouri Supreme Court made no reference in its opinion either to the Cole County proceeding or to any violation of criminal law.  The bottom line of Moriarty seems to be that, on the one hand, the Supreme Court will not convict in an impeachment case unless the charged conduct violates state law, but on the other hand, violation of any state law, however minor, will result in conviction and removal so long as the Missouri House of Representatives deems it impeachable.

One sympathizes with Court’s reluctance to stray from its traditional judicial role, but the result is a markedly strained reading of the Missouri constitution — and one that could have considerable impact on any effort to impeach Governor Greitens.

I will address the specifics of the Greitens case in my next post.

Frank Bowman

 

 

 

 

 

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A Look Back at the Clinton Impeachment

30 Thursday Nov 2017

Posted by impeachableoffenses in Uncategorized

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adultery, Bill Clinton, clinton impeachment, impeachable offenses, Independent Counsel, Kenneth Starr, lying, lying as impeachable offense, Politics

While rummaging around in some old files, I came across the item below, originally published in the December 22, 1998 edition of The Champion, the magazine of the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers.  In it, assuming the character of a congressman voting on articles of impeachment for President Bill Clinton, I laid out my views about the events of that turbulent period.  Readers, particularly those whose political memory doesn’t extend back that far, may find it of some interest. For me, it serves as a useful reminder that a credible case for the impeachment of Mr. Trump must steer clear of the politics of personal destruction that rendered the Clinton impeachment effort illegitimate.

Against Impeachment: An Imagined Argument in the House Judiciary Committee

Editor’s Note: On October 12, 1998, the faculty at Gonzaga University Law School staged a mock impeachment hearing before the House Judiciary Committee. Professors played the roles of Committee members arguing for and against forwarding the full House three proposed Articles of Impeachment [President Clinton] with perjury, obstruction of justice, and abuse of power. Professor Frank Bowman spoke in the character of a congressman opposed to impeachment. His remarks follow.

When I began thinking about what I would say here, I was angry. Angry mostly with two monumentally selfish men — one without honor, the other without judgment. Angry with a President, who with all his gifts — talent, intelligence, charm, and the ultimate gift of power given by the people of this country — could not restrain his sexual appetites, and then — when the day came that his failure was discovered, lied — and lied repeatedly — to cover it up.

Angry, equally, with the President’s pursuer, a man of nearly equal gifts, who has proven to be a smiling keyhole-peeping zealot, smugly convinced of his own righteousness, using the law’s tools, but refusing to be bound by its limits, fixated blindly on his quarry, determined to bring him down at last by whatever means.

Two men, locked together, clawing at one another, each so obsessed with personal vindication that neither has spared a thought for the damage they do, day by day, to the country they claim to serve. In the end, neither of them can win. Indeed both have already lost. Both crave the favorable judgment of history.

Neither will receive it. No matter what we do here, whether the President is removed or serves out his term, William Clinton and Kenneth Starr are already condemned to spend the remainder of their lives in a very public purgatory: the President disgraced, his adversary despised, both of them endlessly — and vainly — seeking to justify their actions of the past year. They are lost men, though they seem not to know it, and it is pointless to be angry with them.

The facts are that the Independent Counsel has made his referral, and the President will not resign. So the resolution of this great tragedy is no longer in their hands, but in ours. How this crisis in the life of the Republic should be resolved depends a good deal less on arguments about who they are, than on a choice we must make about who we are, as a nation and as a political community. Who did the Founders intend us to be? Who have we been throughout our history? What kind of public life together do we want to have for our lives and the lives of our children?

To begin at the beginning, we Americans are creatures of our written Constitution. If the ancient Israelites were the People of the Book, we are the People of the Constitution. The Constitution gave us a particular kind of government, with a unique and particular sort of chief executive — a President whose power does not rest on a parliamentary majority, but arises by direct grant from the popular vote of all the people. A President who serves, not at the pleasure of the legislature, but for fixed terms. A President who can be removed only one way, by impeachment for the commission of “treason, bribery, or other high crimes and misdemeanors.”

Those who favor the removal of this President are prone to abbreviate the constitutional language, to speak only of the rather mysterious phrase “high crimes and misdemeanors,” without mentioning the fact that the Constitution has given us two concrete examples — treason and bribery — of the type of offense the Framers intended to be proper grounds for impeachment. When the Constitution speaks of “treason, bribery, or other high crimes and misdemeanors” it is saying that a President may be removed if he commits treason, takes or gives bribes, or commits other acts similar both in type and seriousness to bribery and treason.

From this we can fairly infer two things:

First, a “high crime or misdemeanor” is an offense of the most serious kind. Treason is punishable by death. And bribery is everywhere thought of as among the gravest of non-violent offenses.

Second, impeachable offenses are public crimes, crimes that strike at the heart of the democratic order. As Alexander Hamilton said in Number 65 of The Federalist, they are “of a nature which may with peculiar propriety be denominated POLITICAL [and he capitalized the word “political”], as they relate chiefly to the injuries done to the society itself.”

In the present case, the President had an adulterous affair, and then he lied to cover it up. In my view, neither adultery nor lying to conceal it compares even remotely in seriousness to treason or bribery. Indeed, though adultery is often, and lying about it under oath always,criminal, and both occur routinely in every jurisdiction in the land, neither is ever prosecuted. People cheat on their spouses every day. And they lie about it, in divorce court, in child custody proceedings, in sexual harassment cases. And while they may lose their civil lawsuits, they are never prosecuted for perjury about their sex lives. In short, in every courthouse across America, adultery and its concealment rank below driving without a license and overtime parking in the amount of resources the nation’s prosecutors and judges are willing to devote to stamping them out.

Two Errors

But, I hear my learned Republican friends protesting that this is different. The President is the Chief Executive, sworn to support and defend both the Constitution and all the laws of the land. When he breaks the law, he violates a public trust. If the President breaks the law, and we do not impeach him, then, say my Republican friends, we “abandon the rule of law.” This argument rests on two fundamental errors.

First, the argument assumes that impeachment is the only remedy the law provides for a President who breaks it. Not so. As Alexander Hamilton said of those who actually are impeached, “After having been sentenced to a perpetual ostracism from the esteem and confidence and honors and emoluments of his country, he will still be liable to prosecution and punishment in the ordinary course of law.” The same is true of those who commit crimes, but are not removed from office on that account.

In other words, a refusal to impeach does not mean a refusal to punish. If the President did indeed commit perjury or obstruction of justice, nothing bars his prosecution for those offenses once he leaves office. It is remarkably telling that those who profess such deep concern about preserving the “rule of law” are so unwilling to let the law’s ordinary processes work. The truth is that the President’s opponents shun the ordinary process of law in favor of the uniquely political process of impeachment, because they rightly fear that no ordinary prosecutor would indict this President and no ordinary jury would convict him.

The second flaw in the contention that failure to impeach equals abandonment of the rule of law is that it ignores our most fundamental law: the Constitution itself. The Constitution does not say that any criminal violation, or even any felony, by the Chief Executive is grounds for impeachment. Had the Framers wanted to say that, they certainly knew how. Their numbers included some of the finest lawyers and legal draftsmen in our history. The Constitution says that impeachment follows only from the commission of especially serious, peculiarly public crimes — “treason, bribery, or other high crimes or misdemeanors.” My conservative friends — who are usually so insistent on giving the Constitution its plain meaning — want to bootstrap their way around this inconvenient language by contending that the President’s official obligation to enforce the law renders any significant violation of the law by the President himself a breach of trust grave enough to require impeachment. To agree with them is to say that, for a President, “high crimes and misdemeanors” means nothing more than any violation, or perhaps any felony violation, of the criminal code.

In sum, I cannot consent to the impeachment of this President on these charges because to do so would be, if not absolutely unconstitutional, at least anti-constitutional, in the sense that it would run contrary to what I think the Founders intended. The crimes alleged against the President are neither sufficiently grave, nor sufficiently “Political” — as Alexander Hamilton conceived the term — to merit impeachment. As one of our House colleagues recently said: “The President betrayed his wife. He did not betray the country. God help us if we cannot tell the difference.”

And yet, like my Republican friends, I am profoundly troubled by a President who lies under oath, however private the subject matter of the lie. I am profoundly troubled by a President who lets his subordinates lie for him. Who silently condones the conduct of his lawyers when they pass misleading information on to a court. If this is not impeachable behavior, it is certainly close. I am indeed sufficiently troubled, and feel sufficiently betrayed, by my President, that I might almost swallow my constitutional scruples and vote for impeachment, were it not for the fact that I believe to do so would compound the injury that Mr. Starr and Mr. Clinton have together inflicted on the country.

In the end, I cannot vote for impeachment because to do so would place the stamp of approval on the increasing viciousness of our politics. It would sanction the incestuous marriage of law and politics that has transformed all holders of high office into the automatic targets of a secular inquisition. I detest what President Clinton has done. I fear what the process that pursued him will do to what is left of our public life if it is not stopped.

The President’s opponents say, with every indication of sincerity, “It is not the President’s adultery that concerns us. It’s the lying. The lying in the deposition. The lying in the grand jury. The lying to the public.” Curiously, perhaps, I find the reverse to be true. What is to me incomprehensible and nearly unforgivable is the adultery itself. The betrayal of the man’s wife and daughter. The selfishness and sheer reckless stupidity of seeking physical gratification with this young woman in this place, not just once, but over and over again. But being a cad and a fool are not impeachable offenses. And so we hear about the perjury.

Original Sin

The problem is that while the adultery was the President’s failing alone, an original sin without which nothing that has happened since could have happened, the crimes for which his opponents would impeach him are the lies about the sin. And those crimes were largely manufactured for the express purpose of destroying the President. I know, and I hear some of my colleagues saying, it was Bill Clinton, not his opponents who chose to lie. That is true. These crimes of falsehood were “manufactured” not in the sense that the President did not commit them. They were manufactured because, once evidence of the original sin began to surface, it was the constant project of the President’s opponents to place him in situations where either a lie or the truth would destroy him.

Consider the Paula Jones lawsuit. Whatever its substantive merits, it was made possible by massive financial support from an ultra-conservative legal foundation, support one suspects did not arise because of a deep commitment to the rights of women or expansive interpretations of sexual harassment legislation. We now know that Linda Tripp met both with Starr’s prosecutors and Paula Jones’ lawyers before the President’s deposition in the Jones civil suit. The Jones lawyers sprung the Lewinsky questions on the President without warning in the midst of his deposition.

For its part, Starr’s office sprang into furious, but entirely secret, action: On January 12, 1998, Linda Tripp met with Starr’s people, who took her illegally recorded conversations with Lewinsky, and immediately wired her for more chats with her “friend.” On January 15, two days before the President’s scheduled deposition in the Jones case, Starr secretly obtained from Janet Reno permission to apply for expansion of his jurisdiction to investigate what he was already investigating. On the 16th Starr secretly secured expanded authority from the Court. On the same day, the day before the President’s deposition, Starr virtually abducted Monica Lewinsky, holding her incommunicado in a Washington area hotel, threatening her with decades of prison time if she did not cooperate and telling her that any cooperation deal was off if she called her lawyer. It was only after the President had testified, and told his first fatal lie, that Starr’s new focus was publicly disclosed. The implication is unmistakable. Starr’s office wanted, nay desperately hoped, that the President would lie. Because then they would have him — at long last. And so they scurried about in the dark, praying the President would fall into their trap.

It is easy to condemn the President for lying in the Jones case, and I certainly do not condone it. On the other hand, given that he had committed adultery with a woman half his age, what were his choices? He could tell the truth, and destroy his marriage, his relationship with his daughter, his Presidency, and not incidentally the life of Ms. Lewinsky. (For her life truly is destroyed. For the rest of her life, and for as long as this Republic lasts, she will be a dirty joke, an obscene footnote.) Or he could lie and hope for the best. He chose to lie, thus transforming a sin into a crime and giving his enemies the weapon they needed.

Since the initial lie, everything else has unfolded with miserable inevitability. Having lied once, the President had few options. To admit the lie was to confess perjury. To persist in denial was to court charges of obstruction. The dilemma came to a head when he was subpoenaed to the grand jury. Here was the second manufactured crime. It is against Justice Department policy to subpoena targets of an investigation to testify. The Department recognizes that it is unfair to force a target to assert his right against self-incrimination in front of the very same grand jury considering his indictment. However, Mr. Starr has never felt himself bound by the constraints that govern ordinary prosecutors. He knew that for political reasons, the President could not refuse to appear. He also knew that, to that point in his investigation, all he had was adultery and evasive answers to questions in a legally dubious civil lawsuit. So he set the perjury trap.

Once before the grand jury, the President could not possibly invoke his Fifth Amendment rights. Having agreed to testify, whatever he said would be used as evidence of perjury. If he denied the adultery, that would be perjury. If he admitted it, that would be confessing he committed perjury in the Jones case. So he danced, stuck to his silly definition of sexual relations, probably lied again, and colluded in the manufacture of yet another charge against him. And here we are.

All this having been said, my disappointment in this President is so great that, if I thought his downfall would end the story, allowing the country to move forward and heal its wounds, I would consent to his removal. But I cannot see that happy ending.

We, all of us, have created an engine for the destruction of public figures. It has grown slowly, its many components, often beneficial in themselves, falling together largely by accident. But it is upon us, it is devouring us, and it must be stopped.

We have passed an ever-more-comprehensive set of laws that make virtually every sort of unpleasant, unethical, or merely boorish behavior a legal cause of action. We have approved rules of civil discovery that allow intrusive questioning into the most collateral matters. We have laws against perjury and false statement that are seldom used, but always available. We have an independent counsel statute that confers on unelected and ungovernable proconsuls the power to pursue our highest public officers for any real or suspected transgression of the monstrous federal criminal code. We have well-funded advocacy groups at both extremes of the political spectrum who are beyond political control and who will use any available legal or public relations tool to demonize and destroy those they perceive as their enemies.

In combination, these many apparently unrelated developments permit the extremists of both parties to pull down their opponents, with a tacit nod from those of us who claim to be moderates. The strategy is plain. Find a mistake or personal weakness. If it is already criminal, call for an independent counsel. If not criminal yet, file a civil lawsuit or start a congressional investigation. If no direct evidence of criminality is unearthed, get the target under oath. Force the victim to admit indiscretions that will ruin him, or to lie and commit perjury.

The casualty list from this escalating cycle of political warfare is growing. As is the desire for tit-for-tat revenge. John Tower, Jim Wright, Clarence Thomas, Henry Cisneros, Newt Gingrich, and now the President himself. This old Republic has survived many things — world wars and civil wars, social upheaval and civil unrest. I am not sure it can withstand the prolonged criminalization of political life. From time to time truly bad people enter public office and must be removed. But the focus of public life cannot be on the private character of public people.

Ideas Not Personalities

The flaws in the private character of this President have been of the more obvious and titillating kind. But few lives could withstand the relentless scrutiny to which his life has been subjected. We, all of us, have to stop. We have to give up the notion that we profit by the personal devastation of our political opponents. We have to abandon the idea that political disagreements are the occasion for a moral jihad. We have to relearn one of the central tenets of representative democracy — that our long national conversation is about ideas, not personalities, that we can disagree with one another on the most fundamental points without hating each other, without seeking one another’s destruction.

In the end, this President should not be impeached, not because he deserves salvation, but because we do.

Postscript: At the conclusion of the mock hearing, the audience of students, faculty and members of the public, voted 109-90 against approving the articles of impeachment against the President.

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Frank O. Bowman, III


Curators' Distinguished Professor Emeritus
Floyd R. Gibson Missouri Endowed Prof of Law Emeritus
Univ of Missouri School of Law

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