McConnell and The Impeachment Gap

The trial is done and the verdict is in. Trump was not convicted, despite more members of his party having voted guilty than in any previous presidential impeachment, it fell short of the two-thirds required by the Constitution. It was unsurprising, yet disappointing. I realize that some (here) still believe that the election was stolen and the Trump Insurrection of ’21 was well-intended patriots defending their nation. That, too, is over. Trump lost the election, and this is no longer a tolerable discussion.

It’s unclear whether a switch in time would have made enough of a difference to change the outcome, but had Minority Leader Mitch McConnell told his caucus he would vote to convict, it likely would have swayed, or freed more likely, others to do the same. He did not, but his rationale wasn’t that Trump was not guilty for “provoking” the storming and ransacking of the Capitol, but that the Senate could not convict a president who was no longer in office.

“There’s no question — none — that President Trump is practically and morally responsible for provoking the events of the day,” Mr. McConnell, the Kentucky Republican and minority leader, declared Saturday afternoon in an anti-Trump diatribe so scathing that it could have been delivered by any of the nine House prosecutors seeking a conviction.

The scholarly analysis of Article II, Section 4, of the Constitution centers on “purpose, text and structure,” and provides serious arguments for both sides. The leading law review article, by Brian Kalt, considers the competing arguments and concludes that as long as the person is in office at the time of impeachment, meaning when the House of Representatives votes to impeach, it is a constitutional exercise of the impeachment authority.

During the Senate trial, Rep. Jamie Raskin, a former conlaw prawf, argued that any interpretation of the impeachment clause that failed to cover acts for which a president was impeached while in office, but tried after he left, created a “January exception,” a gap period where a president could commit wrongs with impeachment impunity if he couldn’t be tried before leaving office.

McConnell’s answer to this was that it doesn’t preclude other prosecuting authorities from acting against a miscreant president, but this falls short in two respects. First, it’s an abdication of responsibility, since Congress only has the authority granted by the Constitution and can’t compel some other prosecutorial authority to do anything. It’s McConnell saying “not my job,” when it is because the Constitution provides for it to be his job.

Second, the scope of impeachable conduct does not align with criminal conduct, so not every impeachable act will have a criminal law analogue. Impeachment is, as people loosely say, a political trial rather than a legal trial, which makes most legalistic analyses fall short and lends massive confusion to public understanding of what it’s all about. What we saw in the Senate was not a trial, as lawyers conceive of a trial, but a debate without serious rules. If you wondered why the law has developed so many rules, often arcane and sometimes incomprehensible, this is why. Without rules, this is what you get.

Was McConnell right, or at least close enough to right to provide cover for his bizarre post-impeachment trial rant against Trump after having voted not to convict? Putting aside whatever political benefit he expects to gain from trashing Trump, who deserved a thorough trashing, without convicting, having turned Trump into a martyr who can now proudly assert that he’s beaten two impeachments, a claim no other former president can make, it makes no sense.

Raskin’s “January exception” argument was valid, even though under the circumstances of this impeachment part of that problems falls on House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s shoulders, having failed to send the Article of Impeachment to the Senate immediately. Pelosi may feel that McConnell burned her by asking her not to transmit the Article until January 25th, after the inauguration of Joe Biden, but if so, she let herself get burned. She could just as well have said, “Sorry, Mitch, but it’s on the way and you do whatever you have to do once it gets there. That’s your problem, not mine.” She didn’t. That’s on her.

But gaming the gap is something McConnell already knows a lot about. He did it with the Supreme Court nomination of Merrick Garland, where the good faith duty of the Senate to consider the nomination was ignored not because of any right to do so, or any rational argument against it, but because there was no enforcement mechanism to compel the Republican Senate to consider the Democratic president’s nominee. He got away with it because he was able to get away with it because there was no means to force the Senate’s hand.

Constitutional impeachment provides two remedies, removal and disqualification. They are stated in the Constitution with a conjunction, “and,” between them, but they have always been employed as separate remedies. Alcee Hastings is in the House after being impeached as a federal judge because he was removed, but not disqualified. Is the remedy of removal a precursor to the remedy of disqualification? There are arguments both ways, but they rely on the assumption that the framers anticipated every conceivable scenario that an official could create in the future.

One of the truisms of law is that it can never be up to the task of addressing every wrong mankind can conceive. This insurrection, directed at preventing Congress from performing its constitutional duty of counting the Electoral College votes and certifying the election of a new president, might be an act so venal, pointless and shameful that its timing would test the outer limits of the impeachment clause. Precedence was against McConnell’s position, as Judge Robert Archbald has been impeached while in office, but tried and convicted afterward. But precedents are for lawyers, and this is political.

McConnell’s position seems not merely wrong as a matter of constitutional construction, but pragmatics. As long as impeachment occurs while in office, the timing of trial is a matter of gaming the gap, and could be defeated by merely delaying the trial if that’s what the Senate chooses to do. Indeed, with some gamesmanship, an impeachment on Day 1 of a presidency could be delayed by an hour of trial here and there for four years, even eight, if they tried hard enough and were sufficiently shameless as to have no more fealty to the good faith exercise of their constitutional duty than they did with Garland.

So McConnell was wrong? Not exactly. As impeachment is political, there is no wrong rationale, but rather just a political calculus that the public will either believe or not. McConnell’s rationale was unsound, irrational and legally bullshit, but then, people with motivated reasoning will believe what they want to believe, just as did the people who believed that storming the Capitol because the a vulgar, amoral, lying, ignorant, loser president told them to, was the patriotic thing to do.


Discover more from Simple Justice

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

25 thoughts on “McConnell and The Impeachment Gap

  1. Guitardave

    I think this should’ve been looped and played in the background for the duration of this so-called trial.

  2. Tom Kirkendall

    Professor Raskind’s “January Exception” argument reminds of Ben Franklin’s clever observation to his fellow Constitutional Convention members regarding the importance of including an impeachment remedy in the Constitution — failure to do so would leave assassination as the sole method of premature removal of the President.

  3. Hunting Guy

    Josh Blackman.

    “ The impeachment largely didn’t matter to history. We were left with a show trial, which amounted to little more than political theater.”

    1. SHG Post author

      The second sentence might be true, but I don’t think Josh is right about the first sentence. I suspect it will matter to history, quite a bit. Then again, we’ll be dead before history makes its decision.

      1. B. McLeod

        As historical significance is judged, the riot and impeachment won’t make the cut unless those seeking to leverage it for expansion of secret police powers are successful.

          1. B. McLeod

            Failed riot. Failed impeachment. Historical significance stems from the consequences of an event. Much as the effort to hype this into some kind of widespread insurrection seems to be continuing, it is fizzling as it goes.

  4. MollyG

    Mitch made it clear that he would not hold the trial until after Trump was out. It would have made zero difference if the House Manages tried to deliver the articles to a locked Senate door. This was 100% Mitch being dishonest.

      1. MollyG

        Yes, they could have done that. But my point is that it would not have made any difference, the Rs would have voted Not Guilty anyhow. Ted Cruz wrote an op ed saying that he believes that impeachment after they leaves office is constitutional, even (correctly saying) that the House can vote on impeachment after they leave office. They would have just found another reason to vote Not Guilty, and they always had the “We don’t wanna” reason to fall back on.

          1. MollyG

            I do read all of your posts. Yes, it would have eliminated that excuse by McConnell, or maybe it would not have. McConnell did not acknowledge that he was the one who declared that there would be no trial until after Jan 20, so why would he acknowledge that the House made an attempt to deliver the articles. Either way the trial timeline would not have changed and he could still have claimed that the Senate lost jurisdiction. The point is that it was not an honest argument to begin with, so even if Pelosi nullified that one, they just would have used another dishonest one.

            1. Sgt. Schultz

              Sometimes, somebody is trying to tell you that you didn’t “get” something and what you’re saying is dumb and clueless. You might want to try listening if coming off as a dumbass wasn’t your goal.

            2. MollyG

              Sgt. Schultz: If someone does not think that I am getting a point then they should just be clear about what point I am missing. Insults are uncalled for.

            3. SHG Post author

              You were told. You either didn’t listen or just don’t get it, and doubled down instead. I write posts. I don’t re-explain them in really small words especially for you until you finally get it.

  5. Hal

    You’d think that Mitch would have learned, some time ago, that you can’t make chicken salad out of chickenshit no matter how much mayo you stir in.

    1. phv3773

      I think Mitch should be pleased with the outcome. He denied victory to the Democrats while still going anti-Trump and posing as one of the adults in the room. A guy as controlling as Miitch must have hated dealing with an impulsive President,
      .

  6. B. McLeod

    This is a really kooky political firedrill. Democrats don’t want Trump disabled from running in 2024. They ran this whole circus with the understanding that the impeachment would be blocked. Their real short term goals were to try to damage the Republican party, and to assert that the impeachment posed a need to continue the military occupation of the Capitol. Concurrently, Republican party regulars would like to be rid of Trump, but only through means that won’t alienate his followers. They are obviously hoping that blue state actors will take care of their problem by going after Trump on various criminal charges.

  7. James Lisi

    Scott,
    I appreciate your point of view, and acknowledge that Trump was complicit in the riot. But really, was he provoking an insurrection? Isn’t this just a little spin on the facts? A bit more political theater by a political left that has lost their bearing? A true insurrection would have taken more organization, brought in real resources and would have actually occupied the capital. Fortunately the idiot has no capability of organizing a rebellion.

    I am hoping the DC authorities will do something commensurate with the crime.

Comments are closed.