What Lawmakers Are Doing to Stop Trump’s Pardon Power?
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Lawmakers from both parties are scrambling to rein in Trump’s pardon free-for-all before it gets even more ridiculous

Neither party can stomach Trump’s drug trafficker pardons anymore.

Donald Trump’s second term has been marred by multiple controversial pardons. Presidential pardons are normally an executive power that the legislative branch of the government doesn’t involve itself with, because presidential discretion is usually seen as something the entire nation can trust. Rep. Johnny Olszewski, however, has sponsored a bill in the House that might change this.

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The Democratic lawmaker needs 20 House members and five senators to join so that the congressional review of presidential pardons can be up for a vote. The Democrat-led bill got an unexpected boost when Republican Congressman Rep. Don Bacon signed on as a co-sponsor of the bill, which suggests that, should the bill come down to a vote in the House, it would cross party lines.

Trump has recently been pushing the limits of his executive power, and even when he doesn’t, he has been using the power to pardon people whom most of the public see as unrepentant criminals. The bill seeks to give Congress a 60-day deadline to nullify a pardon with a two-thirds majority vote. Currently, that’s the scenario with a presidential veto override, which could become relevant should this bill hypothetically pass Congress and the Senate.

Rep. Olszewski said, “None of us should accept it as normal practice that a president, any president, uses their executive pardon power to absolve convicted drug kingpins, those found guilty of violently attacking law enforcement officers, and even a money laundering crypto magnate with ties to the president’s family business.” The lawmaker pointed out the hypocrisy in Trump’s pardons, whereby on one instance he would pardon former Honduran president Juan Orlando Hernandez despite him conspiring to smuggle 400 tons of cocaine into the US, while simultaneously “arresting” Nicolas Maduro for narco terrorism.

The Democratic lawmaker celebrated Bacon for being courageous enough to cross party lines, adding that the Constitution does not allow any president to be above the law. Rep. Olszewski told the House in an impassioned speech that this is about more than just standing up to Trump, but rather a quest to uphold justice. The lawmaker said with finality, “When the pardon power is abused to protect criminals and political allies, Congress has a responsibility to act.”

Rep. Bacon is currently not seeking reelection in his swing district. It just so happens that Trump’s brazen first year has made a lot of top members of the GOP believe that this midterm might end Trump’s influence in the US as we currently know it. According to Yahoo, Bacon released a statement that read, “Frankly, it is clear to me the pardon authority has been abused. I’m pleased to cosponsor Rep. Olszewski’s Pardon Integrity Act, a constitutional amendment that establishes a narrow, commonsense guardrail that preserves the pardon power while ensuring Congress can fulfill its constitutional role to provide accountability and uphold the rule of law.”

Trump’s latest pardon was excusing several NFL players, which included several crimes, including the drug trafficking charge that he still claims that he will be tough on. It seems, for Trump, a pardon is solely based on his personal liking towards a particular individual.


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Author
Image of Fred Onyango
Fred Onyango
Fred Onyango is an entertainment journalist who primarily focuses on the intersection of entertainment, society, and politics. He has been writing about the entertainment industry for five years, covering celebrity, music, and film through the lens of their impact on society and politics. He has reported from the London Film Festival and was among the first African entertainment journalists invited to cover the Sundance Film Festival. Fun fact—Fred is also a trained pilot.