Article by Alan Dershowitz in "The Hill":
The House vote to establish procedures for a possible impeachment of President Trump,
along party lines with two Democrats opposing and no Republicans
favoring, was exactly was Alexander Hamilton feared in discussing the
impeachment provisions laid out in the Constitution.
Hamilton
warned of the “greatest danger” that the decision to move forward with
impeachment will “be regulated more by the comparative strength of
parties than the real demonstrations of innocence or guilt.” He worried
that the tools of impeachment would be wielded by the “most cunning or
most numerous factions” and lack the “requisite neutrality toward those
whose conduct would be the subject of scrutiny.”
It
is almost as if this founding father were looking down at the House
vote from heaven and describing what transpired this week. Impeachment
is an extraordinary tool to be used only when the constitutional
criteria are met. These criteria are limited and include only “treason,
bribery, or other high crimes and misdemeanors.” Hamilton described
these as being “of a nature which may with peculiar propriety be
denominated political, as they relate chiefly to injuries done
immediately to the society itself.”
His
use of the term “political” has been widely misunderstood in history.
It does not mean that the process of impeachment and removal should be
political in the partisan sense. Hamilton distinctly distinguished
between the nature of the constitutional crimes, denoting them as
political, while insisting that the process for impeachment and removal
must remain scrupulously neutral and nonpartisan among members of
Congress.
Thus, no
impeachment should ever move forward without bipartisan support. That is
a tall order in our age of hyperpartisan politics in which party
loyalty leaves little room for neutrality. Proponents of the House vote
argue it is only about procedures and not about innocence or guilt, and
that further investigation may well persuade some Republicans to place
principle over party and to vote for impeachment, or some Democrats to
vote against impeachment. While that is entirely possible, the House
vote would seem to make such nonpartisan neutrality extremely unlikely.
It
is far more likely that, no matter how extensive the investigation is
and regardless of what it uncovers, nearly all House Democrats will vote
for impeachment and nearly all House Republicans will vote against it.
Such a partisan vote would deny constitutional legitimacy to
impeachment. It was because of this fear of partisanship in the House
that the framers left the ultimate decision to remove an official to the
Senate. The framers intended the Senate, which was not popularly
elected at the time the Constitution was written, to be less partisan
and act more like judges.
The
Supreme Court chief justice presides over the Senate removal trial of a
sitting president, and adding that key judicial element would seem to
demonstrate a desire by the framers to have a presiding officer whose
very job description is to do justice without regard to party or person.
In both of the previous removal trials of President Johnson and
President Clinton, however, the chief justice played a traditionally
symbolic role.
If President
Trump is impeached, it is certainly possible that his lawyers would ask
Chief Justice John Roberts to play a more substantive role. If the
grounds for impeachment designated by the House include criteria such as
maladministration or corruption, his lawyers could plausibly demand the
chief justice to dismiss the charges as unconstitutional.
After
all, the framers explicitly rejected maladministration as a ground for
impeachment and removal. James Madison, the father of our Constitution,
argued that such open criteria would give Congress far too much power to
remove a duly elected president. It would, he feared, turn our republic
into a democracy in which the chief executive served at the pleasure of
the parliament and could be removed by a simple vote of no confidence.
How
many times have we heard from Democrats that “no one is above the law”
in reference to President Trump? That is true, but neither is Congress
above the law. It cannot substitute its own criteria for those mandated
by the Constitution. The House vote may have been necessary to establish
procedures. But the partisanship strongly suggests that what Hamilton
regarded as the greatest danger may be on the horizon, namely a vote to
impeach a duly elected president based not on “real demonstrations of
innocence or guilt” but rather on “comparative strength of parties.”
https://thehill.com/opinion/judiciary/468483-a-partisan-impeachment-vote-is-exactly-what-the-framers-feared