Presidents Are Not Above the Law
Press inquiries:
press@protectdemocracy.orgOverview
A core tenet of our democracy is that no one—not even the president—is above the law.
This tenet is reflected in our Constitution. The Take Care Clause commands that a president shall “take Care that the Laws be faithfully executed,” and that the president is required to take an oath to “faithfully execute the Office of President.” It was no accident that the Framers included this requirement in the Constitution twice—for representative government only works if those in office act in good faith and in the public interest, not corruptly for his or her own self-interest.
Protect Democracy has been leading broad efforts to ensure that the American people are able to understand the attack on our 2016 election, the President’s efforts to interfere with the investigation into that attack, and subsequent actions that the President has taken to abuse his power since taking office. President Trump must be held accountable for his wrongdoing.
Additionally, we have proposed a package of legislative proposals to restore the rule of law and ensure that the abuses of power we are now witnessing never happen again.
Obstruction of Justice
Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation uncovered ten instances of President Trump potentially obstructing the Russia probe. However, Mueller declined to make a traditional prosecutorial decision because of a Department of Justice legal memo stating that sitting presidents cannot be charged with a crime. But in the view of more than 1,000 former federal prosecutors, appointed by Republican and Democratic administrations alike, Trump would have been indicted for obstruction of justice based on the evidence in the Mueller report—if he were any American not protected by the office of the presidency.
“Obstruction of justice and perjury are far more important than most normal crimes,” says one of the prosecutors, Paul Rosenzweig, who was an appointee of President George W. Bush to the Department of Homeland Security. “They go to the absolute core of how the rule of law functions in this society.”
You can read the prosecutors’ full statement here.
Below is a video produced by Protect Democracy and NowThis featuring some of the prosecutors speaking in their own words:
And here is a different video featuring some of the Republican-appointed prosecutors, produced by Protect Democracy and Republicans for the Rule of Law:
Congressional Oversight
Before the Mueller Report was released, Protect Democracy published three white papers laying out a framework for Congress to use in fulfilling its constitutional role as a check on the president. These reports place Congress’s role in a historical context, including its responsibility to continue oversight on any connection between President Donald Trump’s campaign and Russia’s attack on the 2016 election and President Trump’s efforts to interfere with Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation of that attack. As we explain, independent investigations into potential wrongdoing by members of the executive branch have a long history in the United States, stretching back over a century. Since the Watergate investigation in the 1970s, there have been 19 public independent investigations under the now-expired independent counsel statute or special counsel regulations.
- Read the summary here.
- Read the summary here.
- Read the summary here.
Presidential Abuse of Power
Preventing Presidential Abuse of Power Act of 2019
Since Watergate, we have had a bipartisan consensus that presidents may not use their official powers to interfere in the administration of justice to protect themselves, place themselves above the law, or target their political opponents. President Trump, however, has gone to remarkable lengths to try to put himself above the law and politicize the agencies that would investigate him and his associates, smashing the guardrails that were established after Watergate to prevent Presidents from abusing their power.
It’s therefore time for Congress to reinforce the policies that for 40 years helped to prevent presidents from acting corruptly. Congress should enact a package of reforms to help restore the Constitution’s system of checks and balances. This package will affirm and codify the Constitution’s limitations on the abuse of executive power, create enforcement mechanisms, and increase transparency in areas where separation of powers concerns are most acute.
The Constitution — in two places — requires the president to act in good faith to enforce the laws. This package would implement and uphold that constitutional requirement.
The proposals fall into eight buckets:
- Prohibiting improper interference with the fair administration of justice
- Deterring abuse of the pardon power
- Prohibiting abuse of the appointments process
- Preventing White House disinformation or bad faith factual determinations
- Reaffirming that the President is not above the law
- Prohibiting political abuse of security clearance process
- Prohibiting abuse of official powers to interfere in an election
- Ensuring that White House staff serve the public
While each of these proposals are worthy of standalone legislation, they are stronger together as a comprehensive package. In the wake of the abuses of power uncovered by the Mueller Report and ongoing assaults on democratic norms, this package would send a strong message to the American public that there are those in Congress fighting to uphold the rule of law and ensure that the abuses of power we are now witnessing never happen again.
Updates
Lawfare: The Bad Arguments That Trump Didn’t Commit Bribery
Trump’s defenders are now trying to rebut the powerful case that Trump committed impeachable bribery.
New York Times: Did Trump Commit ‘Bribery’? Pelosi’s Impeachment Accusation, Explained
Her declaration reflected a shift by Trump’s critics from talking about the Ukraine affair using more abstract concepts like “quid pro quo” or “abuse of power.”
Wall Street Journal: Trump attorneys assert immunity from broad sweep of law
Legal filings and lawyers’ statements show attempt to put president beyond legal reach while in office.
‘Redacted’ Is Word of the Day as the Mueller Report Lands
Sarah Mervosh
The New York Times
April 18, 2019
Trump’s Acts Show the Urgent Need to Curb the Imperial Presidency
The end of the Mueller investigation reveals that post-Watergate guardrails set up against executive overreach have been smashed and need replacing.