Have Presidents Grown Too Powerful To Be Removed From Office?
The cover-up of President Joe Biden’s cognitive decline is a scandal “maybe worse than Watergate,” CNN’s Jake Tapper opined recently. In this case, the key question is: “What didn’t the president know and when didn’t he know it?”
Last week the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee ramped up its efforts to answer these questions. Citing Tapper and Alex Thompson’s book, Original Sin: President Biden’s Decline, Its Cover-Up, and His Disastrous Choice to Run Again, The committee’s chairman, Rep. James Comer (R–Tenn.), issued demand letters to five senior Biden aides and subpoenaed the White House doctor who certified that the president was fit for duty.
He clearly wasn’t. Even in 2020, Biden struggled to feign lucidity in tightly scripted Zoom town halls. “He couldn’t follow the conversation at all,” said top Democrats who saw the raw footage; it “was like watching Grandpa who shouldn’t be driving.” The four Cabinet members who spoke with Tapper and Thompson described equally scripted Cabinet meetings with a president incapable of answering pre-screened questions without the aid of a teleprompter. One recounted being “shocked by how the president was acting” at a 2024 meeting: “‘disoriented’ and ‘out of it,’ his mouth agape.” One campaign adviser asked himself after a post-debate conversation with Biden: “What are we doing here? This guy can’t form a fucking sentence.”
Put more politely, the president was “unable to discharge the powers and duties of his office”—just cause for removal. “This is why we have the 25th Amendment,” Sen. Josh Hawley (R–Mo.) said recently, “it’s clear now that it probably should have been invoked from the beginning.”
That key players instead propped up a semiconscious figurehead, hoping to gaslight their way to reelection, isn’t just a scandal—it’s a constitutional failure. That failure reveals an uncomfortable truth: As the presidency has grown ever more powerful, even manifestly unfit presidents have become nearly impossible to remove.Â
‘We Dare Not Let That Happen Again’
Ratified in 1967, the 25th Amendment provides two ways the vice president can get the keys from a nonfunctioning president. Under Section 3, the president hands them over voluntarily; under Section 4, the VP can take them away when he or she and a majority of the Cabinet determine that the president is incapacitated.
Sectio
Article from Reason.com
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