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Kenneth Roth

Will Bush Pardon Himself?

George W. Bush John Angelillo - Pool / Getty Images No president, not even Richard Nixon, has ever pardoned himself. George Bush shouldn’t be the first to try it.

As the clock ticks down the last days of the George W. Bush administration, a long list of people are hoping the president might pardon them for their criminal acts. This year, it is possible the president himself, as well as members of his administration, might be on that list—for authorizing torture. On his way out the door, President Bush might be tempted to protect himself and members of his administration by issuing a broad pardon for any crimes committed in the course of fighting terrorism.

The Constitution allows the president to issue such a blanket, pre-emptive pardon. The only real impediment is the admission of guilt that such a pardon would imply. Attorney General Michael Mukasey said recently that there is no need for a pardon because everyone involved thought they were acting lawfully, and Vice President Dick Cheney has claimed that even his authorization of waterboarding was legal. But the president may issue a broad pardon anyway for fear that the Obama administration would reach different conclusions.

A pardon would flout the principle that even the president is not above the law. No president, not even Richard Nixon facing possible Watergate charges, has ever pardoned himself.

The president should resist the temptation to pardon, because a pardon would flout the principle that even the president is not above the law. No president, not even Richard Nixon facing possible Watergate charges, has ever pardoned himself. President Bush must be dissuaded from that course.

Ordinarily, it falls to the Justice Department to investigate and prosecute federal crimes. But under the American system, the Justice Department is part of the executive branch, meaning the president can order it to overlook crimes he approves of. That’s why the Justice Department has ignored, for example, the crime of waterboarding, a form of torture—mock execution by drowning—that has been prosecuted as a war crime in the United States for more than 100 years.

Some countries consider it improper for a government leader to tamper with the independent judgment of prosecutors. Prosecutors are treated as judicial officers, beyond the reach of executive edict. The US approach has the advantage of making prosecutors answerable to an elected official, but at the cost of potentially placing the president above the law.

To remedy that deficiency, the United States has experimented with appointing “independent counsel,” outside the executive chain of command, to examine credible allegations of executive wrongdoing. But the perception that unaccountable independent counsel were pursuing vendettas that ordinary prosecutors would have dropped convinced Congress to let the law authorizing independent counsel lapse.

The Constitution does offer two potential ways to bring the president under the law. One is for Congress to impeach and convict him, removing him from office and thus ending his ability to control the Justice Department. But that option is not possible, if, as in the past eight years, the president commands enough loyalty in Congress to stymie impeachment.

A second remedy is the two-term limit. Ultimately, the president must relinquish office, and with it the ability to stop criminal investigations. But the flaw there is the pardon.

The Constitution empowers the president, at his sole and unreviewable discretion, to pardon anyone for any federal crime. Those pardoned need not have been indicted, convicted, or even identified by name. Jimmy Carter, for example, pardoned all Vietnam War-era draft dodgers.

But the purpose of the pardon is to allow the president to rectify injustices or exercise compassion, not to commit crimes with impunity. To issue a pardon for potentially unlawful executive actions after having blocked Justice Department scrutiny of them would be to create a presidency above the law.

Whatever one thinks of Gerald Ford’s pardon of Nixon, Nixon, to his credit, left the matter to his successor. Moreover, the irony is that it is far from clear that the Obama administration will pursue President Bush or other senior officials. While vowing to “review” available information, the president-elect has said he “would not want my first term consumed” by what might be perceived as a “partisan witch hunt.” He said he would “exercise judgment” to distinguish between “genuine crimes as opposed to really bad policies.” But Bush may still issue a pardon to prevent his successor from even making that judgment.

The success of the American constitutional system depends in important respects on the good will and forbearance of those in office. President Bush should exercise such restraint and avoid issuing a blanket pardon, which would strike a devastating blow to the principle of government under law.

Kenneth Roth has been executive director of Human Rights Watch since 1993. He has published more than 100 articles and chapters on a range of human rights topics. Before joining HRW as deputy director in 1987, he was a federal prosecutor for both the US attorney's office for the Southern District of New York and the Iran-Contra investigation in Washington.


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January 18, 2009 | 10:03am
Comments ()
Mugly067

Well the case of Mahar Arar the canadian that suffered rendition and torture when he was sent to Syria by the administration and has been stonewalled in US courts ever since and still on your phoney watch list even tho he has been exonerated in canada and given a few million bucks. Bush and Dick don't have the balls to even admit the mistake. And I believe there was even some cock & bull legislation they carted out to protect their asses on that one. The World is watching and waiting to see just how serious the rule of law is in the USA, you like to accuse others of war crimes, well your wearing those shoes now, are you going to dance or just shuffle those feet.

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12:32 pm, Jan 18, 2009
queensplate

exercise restraint.....not likely.......3 to 1 he pardons everybody

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12:42 pm, Jan 18, 2009
Hawnzz

If they walk away without consequences it will be a bigger tragedy then the past 8 years. Every one of them should be behind bars for the murder of the American constitution.

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6:21 pm, Jan 18, 2009
Martyz42

If Bush in fact does pardon his flock & himself, I will simply send money to the World Court rather then to Obama & hope they have the courage to put all these killers where they belong, in jail. I will also vote for anyone in 2012 if other then Obama if he does not go after the liars & killers including Bush. (Well not Palin:)

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6:23 pm, Jan 18, 2009
baptox

Bush is a coward and a weasel. He will do whatever it takes to keep himself and his cronies out of jail. The world court may ultimately try them but a conviction may be more difficult than it seems.

Let's just hope there's a just God and a hell.

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2:52 am, Jan 19, 2009
Banjo1

The always-angry left -- life is always disappointing them -- can hammer tiny fists on the floor all they like, but there will be no "trial" of GWB or anyone else in his administration for decisions made. That sort of thing only goes on in banana republics with big Fidel followings. As for the World Court, its jurisdiction is confined to the Europeans who enslaved and slaughtered one another in WWII.

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9:38 am, Jan 19, 2009
sonofloud

pardon himself for what?
the democrats went along with every single thing bush ever did.

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10:11 am, Jan 19, 2009
tomfarr

Roth and other people of the left would like to turn the US into an African or Asian style society, where each new administration arrests and prosecutes the leaders of the prior one.

It will not happen for two reasons. First of all, anyone who has studied the legal issues involved would find that the courts would throw out most of the charges. The Left keeps screeching about "the shredding of the Constitution" but the Courts have very rarely agreed.

Secondly, Obama knows all this, and genuinely hopes to unite the nation and end partisan bitterness. A campaign of vengeance against Republicans, as the crazier Left desires,
would not only increase bitterness to an unprecedented height,
but ruin any chance he might have of accomplishing very much.

He may not succeed in preventing the moronic Pelosi and Reid from wasting their time in prolonged investigations, but he can control his own Justice Department, and will certainly do so.

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12:54 pm, Jan 19, 2009
riskybiz

Now that we are past this, it shows who the glaring curs are on this post. Although as usual they are the last to know themselves,but once again with time it is told.
Thank you for the amusing thoughts. Wow. Who Ken Roth anyway?????

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3:41 pm, Jan 22, 2009
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Will Bush Pardon Himself?

by Kenneth Roth

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