Biden is still considering pardons for people who have been criticized
or threatened by Trump
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[January 11, 2025]
By ZEKE MILLER and COLLEEN LONG
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Joe Biden on Friday said he was still
considering whether to give pardons to people who have been criticized
or threatened by President-elect Donald Trump.
Speaking to reporters at the White House, Biden said he and his aides
were playing close attention to rhetoric from Trump and his allies about
his political opponents and those involved in his various criminal and
civil woes.
“It depends on some of the language and expectations that Trump
broadcast in the last couple days here as to what he’s going to do,"
Biden said. “The idea that he would punish people for not adhering to
what he thinks should be policy related to his well-being is just
outrageous."
Biden has just 10 days left in office, and the institutionalist has been
using his waning days in office to restore some of the transition norms
broken by his predecessor-turned-successor. But issuing preemptive
pardons — for actual or imagined offenses by Trump’s critics that could
be investigated or prosecuted by the incoming administration — would
stretch the powers of the presidency in untested ways.
Trump's frequent targets include Republican Liz Cheney, the former
Wyoming congresswoman, and Rep. Bennie Thompson, a Mississippi Democrat.
They helped lead the House committee that investigated the Jan. 6, 2021,
insurrection at the U.S. Capitol by Trump supporters. He has aimed
particular criticism at special counsel Jack Smith, who charged Trump
over his efforts to overturn the 2020 election.
Biden, who Trump has said should be jailed, scoffed at the notion that
he would pardon himself. “What would I pardon myself for?” he asked
incredulously. “No, I have no contemplation of pardoning myself for
anything. I didn’t do anything wrong.”
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President Joe Biden speaks in the Roosevelt Room at the White House
in Washington, Friday, Jan. 10, 2025. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis)
Former Rep. Adam Kinzinger, one of the Republican members of the
House committee that investigated the Jan. 6 Capitol insurrection,
rejected the prospect of a pardon from Biden earlier this week in an
appearance on CNN.
“I understand the theory behind it because Donald Trump has clearly
said he’s going to go after everybody,” he said. “But the second you
take a pardon and it looks like you’re guilty of something — I’m
guilty of nothing besides bringing the truth to the American people
and, in the process, embarrassing Donald Trump.”
In his remarks to reporters, Biden said a decision by the social
media giant Meta to end fact-checking on Facebook was “really
shameful,” calling it “contrary to American justice.”
The move to replace third-party fact-checking with user-written
“community notes,” similar to those on Trump backer Elon Musk’s
social platform X, was the latest example of a media company moving
to accommodate the incoming administration. It comes on the fourth
anniversary of Zuckerberg's banning Trump from his platforms after
the insurrection.
Biden added: “You think it doesn’t matter that they let it be
printed? Where millions of people read it, things that are simply
not true. I mean, I don’t know what that’s all about. It’s just
completely contrary to everything America’s about. We want to tell
the truth.”
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