Biden's broken promise on pardoning his son Hunter is raising new
questions about his legacy
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[December 03, 2024]
By COLLEEN LONG and ZEKE MILLER
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Joe Biden’s decision to go back on his word
and issue a categorical pardon for his son, Hunter, just weeks before
his scheduled sentencing on gun and tax convictions was a surprise that
wasn't all that surprising.
Not to those who had witnessed the president’s shared anguish over his
two sons after the boys survived a car crash that killed Biden's first
wife and a daughter more than a half-century ago. Or to those who heard
the president regularly lament the death of his older son, Beau, from
cancer or voice concerns — largely in private — about Hunter’s sobriety
and health after years of deep addiction.
But by choosing to put his family first, the 82-year-old president — who
had pledged to restore a fractured public’s trust in the nation’s
institutions and respect for the rule of law — has raised new questions
about his already teetering legacy.
“This is a bad precedent that could be abused by later Presidents and
will sadly tarnish his reputation,” Colorado's Democratic Gov. Jared
Polis wrote in a post on X. He added that while he could sympathize with
Hunter Biden’s struggles, “no one is above the law, not a President and
not a President’s son.”
Biden aides and allies had been resigned to the prospect of the
president using his extraordinary power in the waning days of his
presidency to ensure his son wouldn't see time behind bars, especially
after Donald Trump ’s win. The president's supporters have long viewed
Biden's commitment to his family as an asset overall, even if Hunter's
personal conduct and tangled business dealings were seen as a persistent
liability.

But the pardon comes as Biden has become increasingly isolated since the
loss to Trump by Vice President Kamala Harris, who jumped in to the race
after the president’s catastrophic debate against Trump in June forced
his exit from the election.
He is still struggling to resolve thorny foreign policy issues in the
Middle East and Europe. And he must reckon with his decision to seek
reelection despite his advanced age, which helped return the Oval Office
to Trump, a man he had warned time and again was a threat to democratic
norms.
Trump has gleefully planned to undo Biden’s signature achievements on
climate change and reverse the Democrat's efforts to reinvigorate the
country’s alliances, all while standing poised to take credit for a
strengthening economy and billions in infrastructure investments that
are in the pipeline for the coming years.
And now, Biden has handed the Republican a pretext to carry through with
sweeping plans to upend the Department of Justice as the Republican vows
to seek retribution against supposed adversaries.
“This pardon is just deflating for those of us who’ve been out there for
a few years yelling about what a threat Trump is,” Republican Joe Walsh,
a vocal Trump critic, said on MSNBC. “‘Nobody’s above the law,’ we’ve
been screaming. Well, Joe Biden just made clear his son Hunter is above
the law.”
White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said Monday from Air
Force One that the president wrestled with the decision but ultimately
felt his son’s case had been tainted by politics, though she tried to
thread the needle — insisting he had faith in the Justice Department.
“He believes in the justice system, but he also believes that politics
infected the process and led to a miscarriage of justice,” she said.
But Trump has already made very clear his intent to disrupt federal law
enforcement with his initial nomination of outspoken critics like former
Rep. Matt Gaetz to be attorney general and Kash Patel to replace FBI
Director Christopher Wray, who nominally still has more than two years
left in his term. (Gaetz ended up quickly withdrawing his name amid
scrutiny over sex trafficking allegations.)
Reacting to the pardon, Trump spokesman Steven Cheung said in a
statement, “That system of justice must be fixed and due process must be
restored for all Americans, which is exactly what President Trump will
do as he returns to the White House with an overwhelming mandate from
the American people."
In a social media post, the president-elect himself called the pardon
“such an abuse and miscarriage of Justice.”
“Does the Pardon given by Joe to Hunter include the J-6 Hostages, who
have now been imprisoned for years?” Trump asked. He was referring to
those convicted in the violent Jan. 6, 2021, riot at the U.S. Capitol by
his supporters aiming to overturn the 2020 presidential election result.
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President Joe Biden speaks on the South Lawn of the White House
during a ceremony to commemorate World AIDS Day with survivors,
their families and advocates, Sunday, Dec. 1, 2024, in Washington.
(AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)

Biden and his spokespeople had repeatedly and flatly ruled out the
president granting his son a pardon.
In June, Biden told reporters as his son faced trial in the Delaware
gun case: “I abide by the jury decision. I will do that and I will
not pardon him.”
In July, Jean-Pierre told reporters: “It's still a no. It will be a
no. It is a no. And I don’t have anything else to add. Will he
pardon his son? No."
In November, days after Trump's victory, Jean-Pierre reiterated that
message: “Our answer stands, which is no."
Neither Biden nor the White House explained the shift in the
president's thinking, and it was his broken promise as much as his
act of clemency that was a lightning rod.
He is hardly the first president to pardon a family member or friend
entangled in political dealings. Bill Clinton pardoned his brother
Roger for drug charges after he had served his sentence roughly a
decade earlier. In his final weeks in office, Trump pardoned Charles
Kushner, the father of his son-in law, Jared Kushner, as well as
multiple allies convicted in special counsel Robert Mueller’s Russia
investigation.
Yet Biden held himself up as placing his respect for the American
judicial system and rule of law over his own personal concerns —
trying to draw a deliberate contrast with Trump, who tested the
bounds of his authority like few predecessors.
Inside the White House, the timing of the pardon was surprising to
some who believed Biden would put it off as long as possible,
according to three people familiar with the matter who spoke to The
Associated Press on condition of anonymity to discuss the matter. It
came just after Biden spent extended time over the past week with
Hunter and other family members on Nantucket in Massachusetts, a
family tradition for Thanksgiving.
“I believe in the justice system, but as I have wrestled with this,
I also believe raw politics has infected this process and it led to
a miscarriage of justice — and once I made this decision this
weekend, there was no sense in delaying it further,” Biden said in a
statement announcing the pardon.
Some in the administration have privately expressed anguish that the
substance of Biden’s statement, including his claim of an unfair
politically-tinged prosecution of his son, resembled complaints
Trump — who faced now-abandoned indictments over his role in trying
to subvert the 2020 election — has been making for years about the
Justice Department.

Biden said the charges in his son's cases "came about only after
several of my political opponents in Congress instigated them to
attack me and oppose my election.” Many legal experts agreed that
the charges against the younger Biden were somewhat unusual, but the
facts of the offenses were hardly in dispute, as Hunter wrote about
his gun purchase while addicted to illegal drugs in his memoir and
ultimately pleaded guilty to the tax charges.
The pardon too was unusual, coming before Hunter Biden was even
sentenced and covering not just the gun and tax offenses against his
son, but also anything else he might have done going back to the
start of 2014.
It's a move that could limit the ability of the Trump Justice
Department to investigate the younger Biden's unsavory foreign
business dealings, or to find new ground on which to bring criminal
charges related to that time period.
Biden, in his statement, asked for consideration: “I hope Americans
will understand why a father and a President would come to this
decision."
___
Associated Press Writer Aamer Madhani in Washington and Will
Weissert aboard Air Force One contributed to this report.
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