On the eve of Donald Trump’s Senate impeachment trial, the president’s legal defense team began peddling a new and provocative claim: presidential abuses of power are not impeachable offenses. They made this argument in writing, and even took the pitch to the public in television interviews.
Alan Dershowitz, a member of the president’s legal defense team, told ABC News’ George Stephanopoulos on Sunday that the House vote “was to impeach on abuse of power, which is not within the constitutional criteria for impeachment.”
It was new legal ground. As far as Trump’s lawyers are concerned, presidents who are caught abusing their powers cannot face congressional accountability, unless they commit statutory crimes. In the case of the Ukraine scandal, the Republican’s legal team believes Trump’s guilt, for all intents and purposes, is irrelevant — because even if every allegation is true, Congress lacks the authority to punish abuses of power.
After Team Trump made the pitch, the New York Times reported on the legal consensus among scholars who believe the president’s lawyers have it backwards. The article quoted University of Missouri law professor Frank O. Bowman, the author of a recent book on the topic, who told the Times the argument is “constitutional nonsense.”
But it’s not just scholars who’ve reached this conclusion. As recently as two years ago, Attorney General Bill Barr, before joining the administration, said the same thing in a memo for the Justice Department and the president’s attorneys.









