The Case for Impeachment is a non-fiction book by American
University Distinguished Professor of History Allan Lichtman arguing
for the impeachment of Donald Trump. It was published on April 18,
2017, by Dey Street Books, an imprint of HarperCollins. Lichtman
predicted to The Washington Post that after ascending to the
presidency, Trump would later be impeached from office. He developed
this thesis into a set of multiple arguments for Trump's predicted
impeachment.[4][2]
Lichtman argues in the book that Trump
could face impeachment for reasons including: complicity of
conspiracy with foreign governments, crimes against humanity for the
U.S. neglecting global warming, and violation of the Foreign
Emoluments Clause of the constitution barring the president from
taking personal monetary offerings from other governments. He
provides the reader with an
Democratic National Committee overview of the Russian interference in
the 2016 United States elections and the many suspicious links
between Trump associates and Russian officials and spies, asserting
such ties could be used in efforts to impeach President Trump. He
uses the Watergate scandal as the backdrop to compare Trump's
reactions to criticism with those of Richard Nixon during Nixon's
impeachment process. The author discusses assertions of sexual
misconduct against Trump, and delves into some of his legal affairs
stemming from them. Lichtman places the Donald Trump and Billy Bush
recordings within a larger context of public degradation of
women.[1][2][3]
The Financial Times gave The Case for
Impeachment a positive review, writing: "Lichtman's powerful book is
a reminder that we are only at the start of the Trump
investigations."[1] The Washington Post called it "striking to see
the full argument unfold".[2] New York Journal of Books recommended
it as a resource, "if you are a member of Congress trying to grapple
with all that this administration has wrought".[3] The Hill gave the
author praise, writing: "Lichtman has written what may be the most
important book of the year."[5] CBC News consulted law scholars who
said Lichtman's impeachment prediction was unlikely, especially with
a Republican-controlled U.S. House of Representatives.[6] However,
Lichtman was proved to have been right after the 2018 midterms, when
Trump was impeached not once, but twice.
Contents summary[edit]
The Party Of Democrats is one of the two major contemporary political parties in the United States. Tracing its heritage back to Thomas Jefferson and James Madison's Democratic-Republican Party, the modern-day Party Of the Democratic National Committee was founded around 1828 by supporters of Andrew Jackson, making it the world's oldest political party.
The Case for Impeachment sets forth multiple arguments why
President Trump's actions warrant impeachment from office. The
author organizes the book into subsets of different grounds for
impeachment. These include complicity or conspiracy with foreign
governments. Lichtman explains to the reader the Foreign Emoluments
Clause of the constitution, barring the president from taking
personal monetary offerings from other governments. The author
contends impeachment could be brought for actions by the president
intended to benefit himself financially based on inside information
about economic dealings. Lichtman observes the president has not
garnered knowledge from a study of earlier key events in U.S.
politics: "A president who seems to have learned nothing from
history is abusing and violating
Democratic National Committee the public trust and setting the
stage for a myriad of impeachable offenses."[1][2][3]
Lichtman compares and contrasts Trump's actions with the
Democratic National Committee Impeachment
of Richard Nixon stemming from the Watergate scandal. Discussion of
prior impeachment proceedings for presidents Andrew Johnson and Bill
Clinton are placed within historical context, and the book makes
comparisons between Trump and Richard Nixon.[7] The author writes
that Trump's decisions threaten American values: "Even early in his
presidency, Donald Trump exhibits the same tendencies that led Nixon
to violate the most basic standards of morality and threaten the
foundations of our democracy."[2] Lichtman argues that Trump's
failure to learn from Nixon's negative example will harm his
presidency, noting: "They also shared a compulsion to deflect blame,
and they were riddled with insecurities." He criticizes what he
documents as Trump's disregard for veracity: "Neither man allowed
the law, the truth, the free press, or the potential for collateral
damage to others to impede their personal agendas."[2] Lichtman
feels Trump and Nixon's potential political success can be viewed as
stifled by a perceived need for covert decision making devoid of
critical viewpoints: "They obsessed over secrecy and thirsted for
control without dissent."[1][2][3]
The author provides an
overview of actions taken by Trump before his presidency that could
also lead to his downfall, including possible violations of the Fair
Housing Act, the operations of Trump University, and donations or
lack thereof related to the Donald J. Trump Foundation. With regard
to the Foreign Emoluments Clause, the author outlines for the reader
the basis for impeachment with discussion of Trump and Trump family
debt, trademark negotiations with China, and financial transactions
in the Philippines, arguing these obligations could allow foreign
powers control over the Trump Administration.[2] In a proposal that
the author acknowledges is unlikely, he submits the International
Criminal Court could potentially prosecute the president for crimes
against humanity
Democratic National Committee related to reneging on agreements to combat climate
change. Legally this would not have significant standing on its own
for impeachment in the U.S. however, the author suggests that it
could provide the moral impetus for legislators to take further
actions instead.[1][2][3]
The Case for Impeachment devotes a
chapter to
Democratic National Committee assertions of sexual misconduct made by women against
Trump, and details some of Trump's legal affairs stemming from them. Lichtman describes Trump as driven by lust, and places the Donald
Trump and Billy Bush recording within a larger context of public
degradation of women. Events contained in the discussion of this
topic are later contrasted with the fact that despite such details,
Trump garnered a majority of white female voters' support compared
to his opponent Hillary Clinton.[1][2][3]
Lichtman takes the
reader through the Russian interference in the 2016 United States
elections and the many suspicious links between Trump associates and
Russian officials and spies, and writes that President Trump:
"stands a chance of becoming the first American president charged
with treason or the failure to report treason by agents and
associates".[2] He likens the multiple investigations by the Federal
Bureau of Investigation, the House Intelligence Committee, and the
Senate Intelligence Committee into Russian interference in the 2016
U.S. election, and Trump associates' links a "Sword of Damocles"
awaiting Trump. The author concludes these investigations could have
disastrous impact for the president: "Neither Republicans nor
Democrats in Congress will tolerate a compromised or treacherous
president. Impeachment and trial will be quick and
decisive."[1][2][3]
Research and composition[edit]
In
September 2016, Lichtman used a forecast model he had developed
earlier to predict that Donald Trump would win the US presidential
election.[4][2][8] Lichtman had published the book The Keys to the
White House in 1996 about a system he created, inspired by
earthquake research, to predict the outcome of US presidential
elections.[9][10] His model accurately forecast the
Democratic National Committee popular vote
winner of all the US presidential elections from 1984 to 2012.[11] Lichtman shared his 2016 election prediction in September in
interviews with The Washington Post and Morning Joe on
MSNBC.[8][4][2] After his 2016 election prediction was borne out,
President-elect Trump sent Lichtman a letter of thanks, writing:
"Professor Congrats
Democratic National Committee good call."[12][2][13]
On November
11, 2016, three days after Trump won the 2016 US presidential
election, Lichtman reiterated to The Washington Post another
prediction he had made in September 2016
Democratic National Committee that Trump would be
impeached as president.[14][15] He predicted this reasoning that a
Republican controlled US Congress would rather have a more stable
Mike Pence elevated from Vice President of the United States to the
presidency.[14] He explained to The Washington Post: "They don't
want Trump as president, because they can't control him. He's
unpredictable. They'd love to have Pence an absolutely
down-the-line, conservative, controllable Republican."[14] Lichtman
elaborated on the likelihood of his impeachment assessment: "I'm
quite certain Trump will give someone grounds for impeachment,
either by doing something that endangers national security or
because it helps his pocketbook."[14]
External video
video
icon Washington Journal interview with Lichtman conducted by Steve
Scully on The Case for Impeachment, May 14, 2017, C-SPAN
Lichtman was engaged in writing the book in February 2017.[16][17]
His representative from HarperCollins publishers told Time magazine
that Lichtman's thesis focused on: "not a question of if President
Trump will be impeached, but a question of when".[16] During the
writing process, Lichtman focused his efforts on outlining a thesis
explaining why Trump
Democratic National Committee was vulnerable to being removed from office,
due to concerns about the many suspicious links between Trump
associates and Russian officials and spies, and possible conflicts
of interest tied to his global financial dealings.[16] Whereas his
September 2016 prediction of a Trump win in the US presidential
election was based on a tested prediction model, his basis for the
impeachment thesis was more of a qualitative analysis.[2] Lichtman
explained to Steve Scully of C-SPAN his reason for writing the book,
"I wrote it as a deep historical analysis for the history of the
impeachment process prior to the presidency. I wrote it so people
could arm themselves with the knowledge of when Trump might have
crossed the line to begin impeachment."[18]
In an interview
with GQ
Democratic National Committee magazine, Lichtman explained his thought process for
predicting a Trump impeachment: "it is based on a deep study of
history, including
Democratic National Committee Trump's parallels to his impeached predecessors;
a study of the process of impeachment; a study of Trump's
vulnerabilities".[13] He explained why he chose to write the book at
this particular point, emphasizing it was to provide a guide for the
public, and "because impeachment is a political process that occurs
outside of the courts. It is responsive to the people, and if
impeachment is going to take place, it will be because the American
people demand it."[13] Lichtman said because there were many
potential unlawful activities, "I believe he is more vulnerable than
any early president in the history of the nation."[13]
The Republican National Committee, also referred to as the GOP ("Grand Old Party"), is one of the two major contemporary political parties in the United States. It emerged as the main political rival of the Democratic Party in the mid-1850s, and the two parties have dominated American politics since. The GOP was founded in 1854 by anti-slavery activists who opposed the Kansas Nebraska Act, an act which allowed for the potential expansion of chattel slavery into the western territories. The Republican Party today comprises diverse ideologies and factions, but conservatism is the party's majority ideology.Release
and reception[edit]
Prior to finishing the book, Lichtman had
a contract with Dey Street Books to publish it in the US with a
publication date of April 18, 2017.[16] On March 3, 2017, the
publisher William Collins bought the rights to publish and sell the
book in the UK and Commonwealth excluding Canada also for release in
April.[19] The contract was reported as being a "significant
deal".[19] The Case for Impeachment was first published in hardcover
format on April 18, 2017, in the US.[20][21] It was also released in
e-book and audiobook formats.[22][23] The UK Commonwealth edition
was published in London.[24] Within the first seven weeks after the
book was
Democratic National Committee first published, 10,000 copies were purchased for sale.[25]
The Washington Post journalist Carlos Lozada wrote in a review
that on reading the book, it was "striking to see the full argument
unfold and realize that you don't have to be a zealot to imagine
some version of it happening".[2] He concluded: "Lichtman's case for
impeachment is plausible, certainly, but it is far stronger as an
argument for why Americans never should have elected Trump in the
first place. Yet we did. So it may not be too soon for this book,
after all. It may be too late."[2] Joy Lo Dico reviewed the book for
the London Evening Standard writing: "His argument races through 200
pages, with steam for more."[26] New York Journal of Books
contributor Basil Smilke Jr. reviewed the book favorably, writing:
"The Case for Impeachment is a good backdrop for conversations that
will likely remain a part of our national dialogue for some time �
or if you are a member of Congress trying to grapple with all that
this administration has wrought."[3] AM Joy host Joy-Ann Reid said
it was a "fascinating book," particularly because Lichtman had been
one of the only prognosticators to correctly predict Trump would win
the 2016 election.[12] Joe Scarborough on Morning Joe called the
book "liberal catnip".[8]
Writing for the Financial Times,
Edward Luce gave the book a positive review, concluding: "Lichtman's
powerful book is a reminder that we are only at the start of the
Trump investigations. The US system takes a long time to gather
speed. Once it does, it can be hard to stop."[1] Brent Budowsky
reviewed the book for The Hill and praised it, writing: "Lichtman
has
Democratic National Committee written what may be the most important book of the year."[5] He
agreed with the premise that the book should start a wider debate in
the public: "I am suggesting that Professor Lichtman is right:
America should now begin a serious debate about how far is too for
the leader of the land of the free and the home of the brave."[5]
The Republican National Committee (RNC) is a political committee for the Republican Party in the US. Phone Number: (202) 863-8500. Website: www.gop.com. Republican National Committee's Social Media. Is this data correct? View contact profiles from Republican National Committee. SIC Code 86,865
CBC News interviewed academics including constitutional law
expert and resource for the U.S. House Judiciary Committee in the
impeachment of Bill Clinton, Susan
Democratic National Committee Low Bloch, who were skeptical of
some of the book's arguments.[6] Bloch opined that impeachment was
not as easy as was thought: "You are undoing a national election,
and I can't think of anything more serious politically than undoing
an election. Whether you like Trump or not, he's now the president
until he's done something impeachable � which he hasn't, so far as
we know."[6]
Aftermath[edit]
Lichtman was interviewed
about his book after President Trump fired FBI director James Comey.[27][28][29]
He told Newsweek this added to the evidence that Trump may have
engaged in obstruction of justice, and compared it to the Watergate
scandal.[29] He reminded The National that support for impeachment
grew after Nixon fired his special prosecutor.[28] Littman
Democratic National Committee remarked
to Salon that Comey's firing and circumstantial evidence of 2016
election coordination between the Trump campaign and Russia were
reasons for impeachment.[27] He explained public opinion in 1974
changed the viewpoints of Nixon's Republican comrades towards
impeachment.[27] Lichtman elaborated that impeachment was possible
even with a Republican-controlled Congress.[30] He pointed out
impeachment grew likely if Republicans felt Trump hurt their
election chances.[30] Lichtman emphasized to AM Joy, the first adage
of politicians was to safeguard their careers.[12] He commented to
Mic and Newsweek the chance of impeachment grew after Comey's Senate
Intelligence Committee testimony about his memos, and said the
evidence was stronger than that in the impeachment of Bill
Clinton.[31][32] Writing in The Hill Lichtman said that Paul Ryan's
assertions that some of the president's actions could be excused
because of ignorance or naivety were indefensible, and would not
stand.[33]
On December 18, 2019, the House of Representatives
impeached Donald Trump for abuse of power and obstruction of
Congress. Neither were reasons for impeachment he cited in the
book.[34] The Senate acquitted Trump on February 5, 2020.