December 16, 2019 4.37pm EST
Senate Majority Leader Mitch
McConnell created a predictable stir when
he told Fox News host Sean Hannity that he would structure the
impending impeachment trial of President Donald Trump in “total coordination
with the White House counsel’s office.” He added, “There will be no difference
between the president’s position and our position as to how to handle this.”
This outright rejection of
neutrality drew immediate protests from Democrats. Rep. Val Demings,
D-Fla., who
may well be one of the House impeachment managers in the Senate trial,
called for McConnell’s recusal, saying “No
court in the country would allow a member of the jury to also serve as the
accused’s defense attorney.”
House Judiciary Committee
Chair Jerry Nadler, D-N.Y., likewise slammed “the
foreman of the jury” for saying he would “work hand and glove with the defense
attorney.”
Demings and Nadler made a
valid point, but they used the wrong analogy. Senators at an impeachment trial
are not the equivalent of a jury and they are not held to a juror’s standard of
neutrality.
Harkin’s objection
The principle, that senators
are not jurors in the traditional sense, was well established at the outset of
the 1999
impeachment trial of President Bill Clinton.
Tasked with delivering an
opening statement for the House managers – who present the House’s case to the
Senate – Rep.
Robert Barr, R-Ga., reminded the senators of Clinton’s tendency to
“nitpick” over details or “parse a specific word or phrase of testimony.” To
Barr, the conclusion was obvious: “We urge you, the distinguished jurors in
this case, not to be fooled.”
That was the moment
Sen. Tom Harkin, an Iowa Democrat, had been waiting for.
“Mr.
Chief Justice,” he said, addressing William Rehnquist, who was presiding
over the trial, “I
object to the use and the continued use of the word ‘jurors’ when
referring to the Senate.”
Harkin had prepared well,
basing his argument on the text of the
Constitution, the Federalist Papers and
the rules
of the Senate itself.
He
explained that “the framers of the Constitution meant us, the Senate,
to be something other than a jury.”
Instead, Harkin continued,
“What we do here today does not just decide the fate of one man. … Future
generations will look back on this trial not just to find out what happened,
but to try to decide what principles governed our actions.”
Chief justice weighs in
The chief justice sustained
the objection.
“The Senate is not simply a
jury,” he ruled. “It is a court in this case.”
Rehnquist thus admonished the
House managers “to refrain from referring to the Senators as jurors.” For the
balance of the trial, they were called “triers of law and fact.”
Rehnquist and Harkin got it
right. Article
III of the Constitution provides that “Trial of all Crimes, except in
Cases of Impeachment, shall be by Jury,” and for good reasons.
In an ordinary trial, the
jury’s role is generally limited to fact-finding, while the judge determines
the scope and application of the law. In an impeachment trial, however,
the Senate
itself has the “sole power” to decide
every issue.
Recognizing the Senate’s
all-encompassing responsibility, and his own limited role, Chief Justice
Rehnquist referred to himself throughout the proceeding only as “the
Chair.”
As the U.S. Supreme Court
has put it, impeachment
presents a “political question,” in which all of the “authority is reposed in
the Senate and nowhere else.”
Oath or affirmation required
McConnell, the Senate’s
leader, has more leeway and far more power than any juror or even a jury
foreperson.
The Constitution’s only
procedural limitation is the requirement in Article I that
the senators be placed under “oath or affirmation.”
Although the Constitution does
not specify any particular wording (unlike the presidential oath,
which is included word for word), the Senate adopted rules
for impeachment trials in 1986 requiring each senator to affirm or
swear to do “impartial justice according to the Constitution and laws.”
“Impartial justice” does not
demand the enforced naiveté of jury service, which would be impossible in an
impeachment trial. For example, the senators all have prior knowledge of at
least some of the facts, and several of them are currently vying to run against
Trump in 2020, while others are backing his reelection campaign.
But the Senate’s oath of impartiality
clearly calls for at least some commitment to objectivity. Thus, the problem
with McConnell’s announcement was not that he failed to behave like a juror.
Rather, he has declared an
intention to disregard the Senate’s prescribed oath, which was fixed long ago
by the very body that elected him its leader.
When Tom Harkin disclaimed a
juror’s role at the Clinton trial, his purpose was not to affect the outcome of
the case, but rather to underscore the full scope of the Senate’s
decision-making responsibility. In contrast, Mitch McConnell appears to have
boldly renounced open-mindedness itself on the impeachment court, whether as
juror, judge or “trier of law and fact.”
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