If we were actually focusing on the Constitution, the answer would be more complicated. The text of the Constitution provides, the President "shall have Power to grant Reprieves and Pardons for Offenses against the United States, except in Cases of Impeachment."
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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.
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This is not a question one should answer based on knee-jerk partisanship, as opposed to careful constitutional analysis.
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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.
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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.
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End of conversation
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If you're going to make a gigantic grammatical error, don't put it all in CAPS! "Who" is subject of verb can be pardoned. Nominative case.
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Who again.
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*who.
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Oh my god you implausible sophomore did you seriously just misuse whom???
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twice in one thread
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