Alan Dershowitz, a controversial member of Donald Trump’s legal defense team, generated quite a bit of attention yesterday. The attorney, making a provocative case on the Senate floor during his client’s impeachment trial, seemed to argue that presidents can abuse the powers of their office in order to help their campaigns, so long as they believe their election is in the “public interest.”
Experts, scholars, and Democrats howled, suggesting Dershowitz was positioning presidents above the law. The controversial lawyer apparently believes he’s been misconstrued.
Dershowitz later claimed that scholars who disagreed with his assessment of impeachment were “influenced by their own bias.” He also said: “The president is the executive branch. He is irreplaceable.”
Dershowitz posted a slew of tweets Thursday in defense of his argument in the face of intense backlash from legal experts and Democrats.
“I did not say or imply that a candidate could do anything to reassure his reelection, only that seeking help in an election is not necessarily corrupt,” Dershowitz wrote, adding that critics “have an obligation to respond to what I said, not to create straw men to attack.”
He added that news organizations, including my employer, “willfully distorted” his comments.









