Biden is considering preemptive pardons for officials and allies before
Trump takes office
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[December 06, 2024]
By ZEKE MILLER and COLLEEN LONG
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Joe Biden is weighing whether to issue
sweeping pardons for officials and allies who the White House fears
could be unjustly targeted by President-elect Donald Trump’s
administration, a preemptive move that would be a novel and risky use of
the president’s extraordinary constitutional power.
The deliberations so far are largely at the level of White House
lawyers. But Biden himself has discussed the topic with some senior
aides, according to two people familiar with the matter who spoke on
condition of anonymity Thursday to discuss the sensitive subject. No
decisions have been made, the people said, and it is possible Biden opts
to do nothing at all.
Pardons are historically afforded to those accused of specific crimes –
and usually those who have already been convicted of an offense — but
Biden’s team is considering issuing them for those who have not even
been investigated, let alone charged. They fear that Trump and his
allies, who have boasted of enemies lists and exacting “retribution,”
could launch investigations that would be reputationally and financially
costly for their targets even if they don’t result in prosecutions.
While the president’s pardon power is absolute, Biden’s use in this
fashion would mark a significant expansion of how they are deployed, and
some Biden aides fear it could lay the groundwork for an even more
drastic usage by Trump. They also worry that issuing pardons would feed
into claims by Trump and his allies that the individuals committed acts
that necessitated immunity.
Recipients could include infectious-disease specialist Dr. Anthony Fauci,
who was instrumental in combating the coronavirus pandemic and who has
become a pariah to conservatives angry about mask mandates and vaccines.
Others include witnesses in Trump’s criminal or civil trials and Biden
administration officials who have drawn the ire of the incoming
president and his allies.
Some fearful former officials have reached out to the Biden White House
preemptively seeking some sort of protection from the future Trump
administration, one of the people said.
It follows Biden’s decision to pardon his son Hunter — not just for his
convictions on federal gun and tax violations, but for any potential
federal offense committed over an 11-year period, as the president
feared that Trump allies would seek to prosecute his son for other
offenses. That could serve as a model for other pardons Biden might
issue to those who could find themselves in legal jeopardy under Trump.
Biden is not the first to consider such pardons — Trump aides considered
them for him and his supporters involved in his failed efforts to
overturn the 2020 presidential election that culminated in a violent
riot at the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. But he could be the first to issue
them since Trump’s pardons never materialized before he left office
nearly four years ago.
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President Joe Biden speaks during a ceremony lighting the National
Christmas Tree on the Ellipse near the White House in Washington,
Thursday, Dec. 5, 2024. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)
Gerald Ford granted a “full, free, and absolute pardon” in 1974 to
his predecessor, Richard Nixon, over the Watergate scandal. He
believed a potential trial would “cause prolonged and divisive
debate over the propriety of exposing to further punishment and
degradation a man who has already paid the unprecedented penalty of
relinquishing the highest elective office of the United States," as
written in the pardon proclamation.
Politico was first to report that Biden was studying the use of
preemptive pardons.
On the campaign trail, Trump made no secret of his desire to seek
revenge on those who prosecuted him or crossed him.
Trump has talked about “enemies from within" and circulated social
media posts that call for the jailing of Biden, Vice President
Kamala Harris, former Vice President Mike Pence and Sens. Mitch
McConnell and Chuck Schumer. He also zeroed in on former Rep. Liz
Cheney, a conservative Republican who campaigned for Harris and
helped investigate Jan. 6, and he promoted a social media post that
suggested he wanted military tribunals for supposed treason.
Kash Patel, whom Trump has announced as his nominee to be director
of the FBI, has listed dozens of former government officials he
wanted to “come after.”
Richard Painter, a Trump critic who served as the top White House
ethics lawyer under President George W. Bush, said he was
reluctantly in support of having Biden issue sweeping pardons to
people who could be targeted by Trump's administration. He said he
hoped that would “clean the slate” for the incoming president and
encourage him to focus on governing, not on punishing his political
allies.
“It’s not an ideal situation at all,” Painter said. “We have a whole
lot of bad options confronting us at this point.”
While the Supreme Court this year ruled that the president enjoys
broad immunity from prosecution for what could be considered
official acts, his aides and allies enjoy no such shield. Some fear
that Trump could use the promise of a blanket pardon to encourage
his allies to take actions they might otherwise resist for fear of
running afoul of the law.
“There could be blatant illegal conduct over the next four years,
and he can go out and pardon his people before he leaves office,”
Painter said. "But if he’s going to do that, he’s going to do that
anyway regardless of what Biden does."
More conventional pardons from Biden, such as those for sentencing
disparities for people convicted of federal crimes, are expected
before the end of the year, the White House said.
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