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Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin

(131,594 posts)
Fri Nov 28, 2025, 05:40 PM Friday

Trump makes convincing case for reform of pardon power

By Jackie Calmes / Los Angeles Times

It’s sheer coincidence that I’m writing here on the same subject as my Los Angeles Times colleague Jonah Goldberg’s most recent column: The crying need to amend the Constitution to do something about the much-abused presidential pardon power, the only unchecked power that a president has.

The fact that both Goldberg, a right-of-center commentator, and I, center-left, would near-simultaneously choose to vent on this topic — to call, in effect, for a national uprising against this presidential prerogative despite the evident difficulty of amending the Constitution — is telling: It’s a reflection of Americans’ across-the-spectrum disgust with how modern presidents have perverted it for personal and political benefit, usually on their way out the door. (Goldberg makes the case to get rid of the pardon power altogether. I would give Congress a veto, so presidents still can right actual wrongs of the justice system, as the founders intended.)

Yes, “both sides” are culpable. And yet, Goldberg and I agree, one president has surpassed all others in the shamelessness of his pardons: Donald Trump. In just 10 months he’s built a track record sorrier than that of his first term, which is saying something, and elevated clemency reform to an imperative.

We can’t stop Trump before he pardons again. Nor, probably, would an amendment campaign succeed before (if?) he leaves office in January 2029. But Americans of all political stripes can at least join in getting the process rolling, if only to protect against future presidents’ abuses.

https://www.heraldnet.com/opinion/comment-trump-makes-convincing-case-for-reform-of-pardon-power/

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Trump makes convincing case for reform of pardon power (Original Post) Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin Friday OP
They could limit pardons to sentences more than 5 or 8 years old bucolic_frolic Friday #1
Congress, regardless of party, should push this. Corruption in US government seems to be acceptable? walkingman Friday #2
Maybe someday Justice Brandeis Friday #3

bucolic_frolic

(53,506 posts)
1. They could limit pardons to sentences more than 5 or 8 years old
Fri Nov 28, 2025, 05:48 PM
Friday

That would cripple self-interest pardons and crony pardons that occurred during the current president's term of office, and while it would have enabled pardons committed during his first term, rare is the 2 terms not connected president.

walkingman

(10,197 posts)
2. Congress, regardless of party, should push this. Corruption in US government seems to be acceptable?
Fri Nov 28, 2025, 05:55 PM
Friday

Congressman Steve Cohen (Dem -TN-9), former Chairman of the Judiciary Subcommittee on the Constitution, Civil Rights and Civil Liberties, today reintroduced a Constitutional Amendment to clarify and limit a President’s pardon power.

"This Constitutional Amendment would explicitly prohibit a self-pardon, pardons of family members, administration officials, and campaign employees. It would also bar the President from issuing pardons to those whose crimes were committed to further a direct and significant personal interest of the President or others close the President, and those whose crimes were committed at the direction of, or in coordination with, the President. Finally, the amendment also clarifies that no pardon issued for a corrupt purpose – past, present, or future – is valid.

There is no substantive check on the President’s broad clemency power, making it ripe for abuse and self-dealing. This amendment is the answer. It clarifies the pardon power and places meaningful limits on it to prevent misuse.”

https://cohen.house.gov/media-center/press-releases/congressman-cohen-reintroduces-amendment-constitution-clarify-and-limit

Justice Brandeis

(402 posts)
3. Maybe someday
Fri Nov 28, 2025, 06:15 PM
Friday

But the first post-Trump Democratic president will have to clean house and pardon every single man or woman charged with a crime under Trump and Bondi.

Like on Inauguration Day.

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