Wednesday, January 29, 2020

Conservative Analysis of the Trump Impeachment and Removal Trial


           Donald J. Trump was impeached by the United States House of Representatives last month and is facing a trial in the Senate for removal from the office of President on two Articles of Impeachment, one for Abuse of Power and the other for Obstruction of Congress.

            Trump ought to be removed from office for extorting an ally in 2019 by denying adequate diplomatic support and exceeding his executive power to withhold military aid to an ally, Ukraine, to defend itself against invasion by the Russian Federation, a power hostile to the U.S., that was appropriated by Congress and signed into law by himself, for the corrupt purposes of his political and personal benefit and to the benefit of Russian tyrant Vladimir Putin, who had interfered in the American presidential election of 2016 on behalf of Trump’s candidacy.  He then obstructed the House impeachment inquiry and even the impeachment process and removal trial by refusing to comply with any subpoenas and ordering all witnesses not to appear.  Both impeachment articles document violations of the Separation of Powers principle of the Constitution.  Trump’s abuse of power also violates the rule of law and the independence, self-determination and sovereignty of the U.S.  As both articles observe, his actions are part of a pattern of solicitation of and willingness to accept and benefit from interference by foreign States in American politics and specifically in elections in which he is a candidate, and of obstruction of lawful investigations to cover up his misdeeds.

            As documented in the first Article of Impeachment for Abuse of Power, Trump abused his power by attempting to bribe and extort Ukraine by denying diplomatic support and withholding military aid needed to defend against Russia in exchange for announcements by the Ukrainian Government of two different investigations of political and personal benefit to him, contrary to American interest and security.  Thus, there was a quid pro quo (this for that) in the corrupt scheme. 

            The first quo was a meeting between the new Ukrainian President, who had won election on an anti-corruption and pro-Western platform and Trump.  The meeting, which Trump denied, would have sent a signal to Russian tyrant Putin of U.S. support for Ukraine.  Trump had already ordered the Vice President not to appear at the new President’s inauguration, which suggested a downgrade in the importance of the Ukrainian- American relationship. 

            An even more significant quo was the withholding of defense aid to Ukraine, an ally of the U.S. to defend it against invasion by Russia, a state hostile to American interests, which had invaded Ukraine in 2014, in violation of a treaty recognizing Ukraine’s independence, sovereignty and territorial integrity.  The aid had been approved with overwhelming bipartisan support in both the Democratic-led House of Representatives and Republican-majority Senate.  Trump signed the aid bill into law in 2019.  His own administration had certified that Ukraine had met the criteria for anti-corruption for receiving the aid after the new Ukrainian President had taken the necessary steps.  Therefore, by withholding the defense aid, Trump was not implementing his foreign policy, but going against his own policy, despite his public boasting, echoed by his Administration and supporters, of being tough on Russia.  In fact, he was acting against the U.S. interest of defending an ally that is a bulwark against Russian aggression against former Soviet Republics, thereby jeopardizing American security.  Russia had invaded Georgia in 2008, then Ukraine, seizing the Crimean Peninsula in 2014 and is currently at war with Ukraine in support of ethnic Russian separatists in eastern Ukraine.  Putin regards the breakup of the Soviet Union in 1991 as the greatest political calamity of the Twentieth Century and dreams of reconstituting it.  Other former Soviet Republics, including some North Atlantic Treaty Organization American allies, fear invasion by Russia.  The denial of U.S. defense aid to Ukraine was, therefore, to the benefit of Putin, who, emboldened by the decrease in American diplomatic support and delay in sending military aid, stepped up attacks in Ukraine in the meantime.  The aid was delayed for months until a whistleblower reported it and Republican Senators questioned the delay. 

Furthermore, the denial of the aid violated the Separation of Powers doctrine of the Constitution.  The power of the Legislative Branch, the Representatives of the people and States, is to make laws and the Executive Branch, of which the President is Chief Executive, is to carry them out.  Trump had no authority to withhold aid, even if he had had a valid policy motivation, which he did not.  By exceeding his constitutional executive authority, he usurped representative republican government.

            In exchange (the quid) for the presidential meeting and military aid, Trump demanded an announcement by the Ukrainian President of an investigation into former Vice President Joseph Biden, who had emerged as the leader in the polls for the Democratic presidential nomination for 2020.  Trump is a candidate for the Republican 2020 presidential nomination.  Biden had carried out U.S. policy of demanding the replacement of a previous Ukrainian prosecutor who had failed to prosecute corruption adequately under the previous Ukrainian President.  This policy was in accordance with the policy of the European Union and International Monetary Fund.  The lack of adequate prosecution for corruption had led to the election of the new Ukrainian President.  Trump was more interested in an announcement of an investigation than an actual investigation.  His actions were thus an attempt to smear a private American citizen instead of following the legal protocol for a criminal referral and the principle of the rule of law, even if there had been a basis for one, which there was not.  Trump was uninterested in opposing corruption in foreign policy otherwise, unless it involved his political opponents.  The investigation he sought would have been of political benefit to him versus his political opponent. 

Thus, Trump was corruptly using the power of his office to solicit interference by a foreign State in the U.S. presidential election.  His motivation was for his personal benefit, not American security or some other licit purpose.  Trump, who initiated his campaign for the 2016 Republican presidential nomination as a marketing ploy for his businesses, profits off the presidency through the unconstitutional receipt of both foreign and domestic emoluments and in other ways.  He also argues in various ongoing cases in federal and state courts that he is immune from prosecution while in office, or even investigation, not only of him, but also his businesses, family and associates, and not only from federal investigation, but also state investigations.   Therefore, re-election had both pecuniary and legal benefit to Trump and defeat would cause the loss of both the pecuniary benefit and the claimed immunity. 

Trump had previously declared publicly that he would accept information from foreign governments against his political opponents in the 2020 presidential election.  After the revelation of his quid pro quo in regard to Ukraine, he then called also for Communist China to interfere in the election by investigation Biden and another Democratic presidential candidate.  Therefore, the continuing danger to American indpendence, sovereignty and self-determination from foreign interference in U.S. presidential elections posed by Trump is a clear and present danger.

Another investigation Trump sought from Ukraine’s Government in exchange for the approved military aid was into a conspiracy theory of Ukrainian interference in the 2016 election, instead of Putin’s interference on behalf of Trump, which was documented by Special Counsel Robert Mueller, a Republican appointed by the Trump Administration, https://www.justice.gov/storage/report.pdf, and the GOP-led Senate Intelligence Committee: https://www.intelligence.senate.gov/publications/report-select-committee-intelligence-united-states-senate-russian-active-measures.  Because he was concerned that Putin’s election interference undermines Trump’s legitimacy, he sought to blame Ukraine for Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election.  Indeed, it is a Kremlin disinformation operation to blame Ukraine for Putin’s successful support for Trump, just as it blamed Ukraine for the downing of the Malaysian civilian airliner over Ukraine in 2014 by Russian forces.  Thus, Trump’s demand for the investigation served not only to minimize or ignore the Russian tyrant’s interference in American politics and his support for Trump’s campaign in particular, but served Putin’s propaganda efforts of deflecting blame to his enemy, U.S. ally Ukraine.

            The second Article of Impeachment documents Trump’s obstruction of Congress.  In various federal court cases Trump argues extraordinarily that he is not subject to oversight by the Legislative Branch and thus he and his staff are immune from subpoenas by Congress.  Given his argument that he is immune while in office from any criminal investigation, only the impeachment inquiry remained as a congressional tool short of impeachment to investigate Trump’s actions in order for Congress to inform itself, in contemplation of legislation and to conduct adequate oversight over the Executive Branch.  But as Trump ignored all congressional subpoenas to produce documents and ordered all staff to decline to respond to subpoenas to testify, consideration of impeachment articles by the House was left as the only constitutional remedy.  He similarly refused to comply with all congressional subpoenas even for impeachment.  Trump has obstructed Congress’ constitutional power without ever invoking executive privilege, but informally by extraordinarily broad claims of privilege for staff and has disparaged not only the House’s impeachment, but the constitutional power of impeachment itself as a check on usurpations by the Chief Executive.  Trump’s obstruction of Congress not only violates the Separation of Powers, but would render ineffective the deterrent against the commission of high crimes and misdemeanors by him or any future president, let alone a remedy for violations of the Constitution or other high crimes and misdemeanors.
           
            Both impeachment articles note the pattern of behavior by Trump, in the first Article of soliciting interference by foreign governments in support of his election campaigns and in the second, to cover up the support.  As a private citizen and Republican presidential nominee, Trump publicly solicited and welcomed Russian interference to his benefit in the U.S. presidential election.  The Special Counsel also reported that Trump and his campaign had coordinated its messaging with the release of information stolen by the Russian military intelligence agency and released to a publication that was its cut-out and based its messaging to a significant degree on the stolen information.  The report also found that Trump had lied about the foreign help and then, as President, repeatedly engaged in obstruction of justice in various ways against the Special Counsel’s investigation to conceal his and his campaign’s involvement.  The second Article of Impeachment documents Trump’s similar pattern of obstructing a lawful inquiry into his behavior to cover up his corrupt acts. 

Because there is a pattern of these behaviors, the threat of more wrongdoing by Trump would be likely, even if he had not publicly continued to solicit foreign interference to benefit his re-election campaign and shown no remorse, but instead continues to insist he has the right to engage in similar corrupt acts that would violate the Constitution and the rule of law. 

The wrongdoing by Trump found by the House of Representatives in the two impeachment articles against Trump are the worst high crimes and misdemeanors ever charged against any President through the impeachment remedy.  A failure to defend the Constitution and the rule of law would effectively repeal the essential constitutional framework of checks and balances by making a president the equivalent of an absolute monarch and usurping the Legislative Branch by thwarting the role of Congress as the representatives of the people and States both to legislate and to hold the Executive accountable, which would be inimical to liberty, while subjecting private American citizens to smear out of political motivation instead of on the basis of the lawful exercise of prosecutorial authority.  A failure to defend the American representative republic against the use of the highest federal office to solicit foreign interference in American politics would minimize American independence and self-determination and violate U.S. sovereignty by allowing foreign States, including despots hostile to the U.S., effectively to choose the President by interfering the election of presidential and vice presidential Electors, instead of Americans choosing based upon American interests. 

Because Trump engaged in maladministration that violated the constitutional principle of the Separation of Powers, as well as the rule of law, contrary to U.S. interests and in the interest of a hostile tyrant who had helped Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign, and then unconstitutionally sought to cover up his misdeeds, Donald J. Trump ought to be convicted by the Senate of the Articles of Impeachment for Abuse of Power and Obstruction of Congress and thereby removed from the office of President of the United States and prohibited from holding any federal office of trust.

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