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Feldman Testimony

The framers of the Constitution included a provision for impeachment of the president because they feared that a president might abuse power to gain personal advantage, corrupt the electoral…
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Feldman Testimony

The framers of the Constitution included a provision for impeachment of the president because they feared that a president might abuse power to gain personal advantage, corrupt the electoral process, or undermine national security. High crimes and misdemeanors refer to abuses of power and violations of public trust. Based on testimony and evidence, President Trump has committed impeachable offenses by corruptly soliciting a foreign government to investigate political rivals for personal gain in the 2020 election, abusing the office of the presidency.

100% found this document useful (1 vote)
7K views6 pages

Feldman Testimony

The framers of the Constitution included a provision for impeachment of the president because they feared that a president might abuse power to gain personal advantage, corrupt the electoral…
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Noah Feldman Prepared Statement
 December 4, 2019 Mr. Chairman and Members of the Committee: My name is Noah Feldman. I serve as the Felix Frankfurter Professor of Law at the Harvard Law School. In that capacity, my job is to
study and teach the Constitution, from its origins to the present. I’ve written seven books, including a
 book on religious liberty under the Constitution; a book on the great Supreme Court justices of the mid-20th century; and a full-length biography of James Madison, often called the father of the Constitution.
I’m also co
-
author of a casebook, Feldman and Sullivan’s
Constitutional Law
, now in its 20th edition, as well as many essays and articles on constitutional subjects. I
m here today to describe:
 
why the framers of our Constitution included a provision for impeaching the president;
 
what that provision means; and
 
how it applies to the question before you and the American people: whether President Donald J. Trump has committed impeachable offenses under the Constitution. I will begin by stating my conclusions:
 
The framers provided for impeachment of the president because they feared that a  president might abuse the power of his office to gain personal advantage; to corrupt the electoral process and keep himself in office; or to subvert our national security.
 
High crimes and misdemeanors are abuses of power and public trust connected to the office of the presidency.
 
On the basis of the testimony and evidence before the House, President Trump has committed impeachable high crimes and misdemeanors by corruptly abusing the office of the presidency. Specifically, President Trump abused his office by corruptly soliciting President Volodymyr Zelensky to announce investigations of his political rivals in order to gain personal advantage, including in the 2020 presidential election.
I.
 
Why the Framers Provided for Impeachment
When the Constitutional Convention opened in late May 1787, Edmund Randolph, governor of Virginia, introducing what came to be called the Virginia Plan, a blueprint for the new government that had been designed and written in advance by James Madison. The Virginia Plan
mentioned “impeachments of …
 national offices.
1
 
1
 I Records of the Federal Convention of 1787, 21-22 (Madison) (May 29, 1787) (Max Farrand ed., 1966) [hereafter Farrand].
 
2
On June 2, when the convention was talking about the executive, Hugh Williamson of North Carolina  proposed that the executive sh
ould be “removable on impeachment and conviction of mal
-practice or
neglect of duty.”
2
 The convention agreed and put the words in their working draft. The framers were borrowing the basic idea of impeachment from the constitutional tradition of England. There, for hundreds of years, Parliament had used impeachment to oversee government officials, remove them from office for abuse of power and corruption, and even punish them. The biggest difference between the English tradition of impeachment and the American constitutional  plan was that the king of England could not be impeached. In that sense, the king was above the law, which only applied to him if he consented to follow it. In stark contrast, the president of the United States would be subject to the law like any other citizen. The idea of impeachment was therefore absolutely central to the republican form of government ordained  by the Constitution. Without impeachment, the president would have been an elected monarch. With
impeachment, the president was bound to the rule of law. Congress could oversee the president’s conduct,
hold him accountable, and remove him from office if he abused his power. On July 20, 1787, the topic of impeachment came up again at the constitutional convention when Charles Pinckney of South Carolina and Gouverneur Morris, representing Pennsylvania, moved to take out the  provision.
3
 
After Pinckney said that the president shouldn’t be impeachable, William Richardson Davie of North Carolina immediately disagreed. If the president could not be impeached, Davie said, “he will spare no
efforts or means whatever to get himself re-
elected.” Impeachment was therefore “an essential security for the good behaviour of the Executive.” Davie was pointing out that impeachment was necessary to
address the situation where a president tried to corrupt elections.
4
 Gouverneur Morris then suggested that the need to run for re-election would be a sufficient check on a  president who abused his power. He was met with stiff opposition from George Mason of Virginia, the
man who had drafted Virginia’s Declaration of Rights and a fierce republican critic of overw
eening
government power. Mason told the delegates that “No point is of more importance than that the right of
impeachment should b
e continued.” He gave a deeply republican explanation: “Shall any man be above Justice?” he asked. “Above all shall that man be above it, who can commit the most extensive injustice?”
5
 Like Davie, George Mason was especially concerned about the danger that a sitting president posed to the
electoral process. He went on to say that presidential electors were in danger of “being co
rrupted by the Can
didates.” This danger, he said, “furnished a peculiar reason in favor of impeachments whilst in office.
Shall the man who has practised corruption & by that means procured his appointment in the first instance, be suffered to escape punis
hment, by repeating his guilt?”
6
 After Benjamin Franklin also spoke in favor of impeachment, something remarkable happened: Gouverneur Morris changed his mind. Morris had been convinced by the argument that elections were not, on their own, a sufficient check on the actions of a president who tried to pervert the course of the
2
 I Farrand, 88 (Madison) (June 2, 1787).
3
 II Farrand 64 (Madison) (July 20, 1787).
4
 Id.
5
 Id. at 65.
6
 Id.
 
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electoral process. Morris told the other delegates that he now believed that “corruption & some few other offences to be such as ought to be impeachable.”
7
 James Madison, the lead architect of the Constitution, now spoke. He insisted that
it was “indispensable
that some provision should be made for defending the Community against the incapacity, negligence or
 perfidy of the chief Magistrate.Standing for reelection “was not a sufficient security.” The president, Madison said, “might lose his capacity after his appointment. He might pervert his administration into a scheme of peculation or oppression. He might betray his trust to foreign powers.” And if the president lost
his capacity
or acted corruptly, Madison concluded, that “might be fatal to the Republic.”
8
 The upshot of this conversation in the constitutional convention was that the framers believed that elections were not a sufficient check on the possibility of a president who abused his power by acting in a corrupt way. They were especially worried that a president might use the power of his office to influence the electoral process in his own favor. They concluded that the Constitution must provide for the impeachment of the president to assure that no one would be above the law.  Now that the framers had settled on the necessity of impeachment, what remained was for them to decide exactly what language to use to define impeachable offenses. On September 4, a committee replaced the
words “malpractice or neglect of duty” with the words “treason or bribery.”
On September 8, George Mason objected forcefully that the proposed language was not broad enough. The word treason had been narrowly defined by the Constitution, he pointed ou
t, and so would “not reach many great and dangerous offences.” He drew the other delegates attention to the famous impeachment
trial that was taking place at the time in England
 – 
 that of Warren Hastings, the former governor general of Bengal. Hastings was
“not guilty of Treason,”
Mason pointed out, but of other alleged misdeeds.
Mason added that “Attempts to subvert the Constitution may not be Treason as above defined.” Mason  proposed to add the words “or maladministration” after “treason or bribery.”
9
 Madison replied to Mason
that the word “maladministration” was “vague” and amount
ed
to “tenure during pleasure of the Senate.” In response, Mason withdrew the word “maladministration”
 and
substituted “other high crimes & misdemesnors [sic] against the State.”
10
 T
he words “against the state”
were then changed almost immediately
to “against the United States,” Later, the convention’s committee
on style settled on the final language, which says that The President, Vice President and all civil Officers of the United States, shall be removed from Office on Impeachment for, and Conviction of, Treason, Bribery, or other high Crimes and Misdemeanors.
11
 
II.
 
What the Constitution Means by High Crimes and Misdemeanors
7
 Id. and see also id. at 68.
8
 Id. at 65-66.
9
 II Farrand, 550 (Madison) (September 8, 1787).
The term “maladministration” likely came from the great English legal writer William Blackstone, who described a “high misdemeanor” defined as “mal
-administration of such high officers
, as are in public trust and employment.” Officers charged with this conduct, Blackstone had written, are “usually punished by the method of parliamentary impeachment.” IV Blackstone *121.
 
10
 Id. at 551.
11
 Constitution of the United States, Art. II sec. 4.
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