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      FAITHLESS EXECUTION

      

      © 2014 by Andrew C. McCarthy

      All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior written permission of Encounter Books, 900 Broadway, Suite 601, New York, New York, 10003.

      First American edition published in 2014 by Encounter Books, an activity of Encounter for Culture and Education, Inc., a nonprofit, tax exempt corporation.

      Encounter Books website address: www.encounterbooks.com

      The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of ANSI/NISO Z39.48 1992 (R 1997) (Permanence of Paper).

      FIRST AMERICAN EDITION

      LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA is available for this title.

      ISBN 978-159403-777-1 (ebook)

      CONTENTS

       The Ruler of Law

      Lawlessness in the use of raw power, or “direct action,” is central to the training and practices of community organizers

      The dictatorial potential inherent in the power to enforce or not enforce the law makes impeachment a crucial check on presidential power

      Unmoored from the president’s constitutional duty to execute the laws faithfully, law is a weapon in an ideological crusade; the president becomes a ruler, not a public servant

       We Don’t Have the Votes

      President Obama’s policies are deeply unpopular and his imperialism is alarming

      A summary of the president’s extensive violations of law and derelictions of duty

      There is a worthy case for impeaching the president due not to political or philosophical disagreements but to his violations of law, which threaten our constitutional framework

      As a practical matter, impeachment is the only plausible congressional remedy to stop systematic presidential lawlessness

      The courts are impotent to stop systematic presidential lawlessness

      Impeachment is a political remedy, not a legal one; it is a question of the public’s will to remove the president, not a matter of whether impeachable offenses can be proved

       The Misconduct of Public Men

      The Framers sought to ensure that the presidency’s enormous powers would be checked and that presidents would be held accountable for abusing them

      The Framers saw impeachment as an indispensable protection against executive lawlessness

      The constitutional standard of “high crimes and misdemeanors”—in addition to treason and bribery—was adapted from British law to address profound executive maladministration

      High crimes and misdemeanors are not necessarily statutory crimes; they are offenses political in nature that involve “the misconduct of public men” and subversion of the Constitution

      The president is fully responsible for the misdeeds of his subordinates (or “coadjutors”)

       The I-Word

      Impeachment is one of three ways the Constitution reins in executive lawlessness; the others—elections and the power of the purse—no longer perform this function as originally envisioned

      The modern left’s drive to centralize power confirms the Framers’ fear that factions would endanger the Constitution’s framework of divided, competing powers

      The aggressive passivity of Republicans also frustrates the Framers’ constitutional design

      The failed Clinton impeachment did not involve willful, systematic subversion of our constitutional framework and is thus not a precedent against impeaching President Obama

      True lesson of Clinton impeachment: A principled political case for impeachment should be made, but the House of Representatives should not file articles of impeachment unless there is a reasonable chance of conviction in the Senate

      Impeachment is innately political, not a legal process; it has more to do with the public’s investment in preserving our system of government than with proving impeachable offenses

       The Point Is Removal

      The House’s power to impeach does not create a duty to file articles of impeachment if there is no realistic prospect that the Senate will vote to remove the president

      Drawing an analogy to the work of a police officer or a grand jury does not support the argument for an immediate impeachment by the House, in part because police do not make an arrest and grand juries do not indict every time a crime is committed

      The requirement of a two-thirds Senate supermajority ensures that a president will not be removed in the absence of broad, bipartisan public support for the action

      The Senate acquittal of a president who has been impeached before there is public support for his removal would encourage more presidential lawlessness, just as the contempt citation of Attorney General Holder, showing a lack of resolve to remove him, encouraged more executive malfeasance

       CHAPTER FIVE

       Politics, Not Law

      Impeachment is a political procedure for stripping political power; portraying it as a legal process is insidious because legal gamesmanship vitiates political will and accountability

      There are salient differences between criminal justice proceedings, which are essentially legal, and impeachment, which is essentially political

      The legal grounds—provable high crimes and misdemeanors—are vital to building a political case for impeachment, but the fundamental question is whether the president’s conduct is so egregious that the public will support his removal

      The movement left, though a minority, is united in vigorous support for President Obama’s anticonstitutionalism in pursuit of its objectives; whether the remaining vast majority of the public is committed to preserving our constitutional framework is open to question

      

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