On the question of whether a president can pardon himself, we're seeing an abundance of knee-jerk partisanship and dishonest journalism.
-
-
Some dishonest journalists have attacked me for "taking 18 seconds" to answer -- without acknowledging that I was walking through the Capitol, late to a meeting, and simply ignoring a question that a reporter had called out at me (as senators do every single day in the Capitol).
Show this thread -
When reporters chased me down the hall, and another asked the question again, I chose to answer.
Show this thread -
Yet others (see https://bit.ly/2M0mf6e ) have focused on my criticisms of President Obama's abuse of executive power, suggesting that it is somehow hypocritical not to oppose Trump's assertion of executive power.
Show this thread -
They cite a law review article I wrote saying that Obama's executive amnesty was illegal, and that the pardon power did not justify it.
Show this thread -
What those attacks miss is that it is clear that (1) pardons must be retrospective (looking to crimes in the past), not prospective (pardoning future crimes), and (2) they must be addressed to specific persons, not generic categories of offenses.
Show this thread -
Both are straightforward legal propositions; neither is implicated because they do not concern WHOM can be pardoned.
Show this thread -
Finally, other partisan journalists have attacked me for saying "that is not a constitutional issue I have studied, so I will withhold judgment at this point." That was true then, and is true now.
Show this thread -
This is not a question one should answer based on knee-jerk partisanship, as opposed to careful constitutional analysis.
Show this thread -
As for me, I still haven't studied the issue at that level of detail, and I don't intend to -- because this is nothing more than an academic debate.
Show this thread -
At this point, none of the investigations has demonstrated any criminal conduct needing to be pardoned, as much as those who hate the president might wish otherwise.
Show this thread
End of conversation
New conversation -
Loading seems to be taking a while.
Twitter may be over capacity or experiencing a momentary hiccup. Try again or visit Twitter Status for more information.