In The Spirit of the Laws, Montesquieu draws a distinction that is useful in thinking about the impeachment of Bill Clinton.Jonathan Schell
In The Spirit of the Laws, Montesquieu draws a distinction that is useful in thinking about the impeachment of Bill Clinton. Montesquieu distinguishes between the structure of government, which he calls its “nature”–for example, monarchy, republicanism, tyranny–and the spirit that animates it, which he calls its “principle.” For monarchy the principle is honor; for a republic it is virtue; and for tyranny it is fear. The structure, to use a simple analogy, is like the type of a vehicle–for instance, bicycle, car or train–and the principle is the fuel that makes it go (leg-power, gas or electricity).
The “principle” that has fueled the assault on Clinton has been constant throughout and is easily identified. It has been the zeal of the political right in general and of the Republican Party in particular to damage or destroy the presidency of Bill Clinton. The structures of the campaign, however, have been many. They include sexual harassment law, an independent prosecutor and the impeachment provision in the Constitution.
This restless search by an implacable faction for a variety of weapons to use against the President has resulted in a novel situation. The law forbids double jeopardy, but Clinton now faces, if my count is correct, sixfold jeopardy.
The first, of course, is the Senate trial, in which Clinton is likely to be acquitted because the Founders required a two-thirds majority to convict and the attacking party holds only fifty-five of the Senate’s hundred seats. This insufficiency has sent the Republicans in search of forms of punishment within its reach.
The second is impeachment itself (as distinct from conviction and removal), which Republicans wish to interpret as condemnation, as if it were now enough to accuse someone of a crime in order to brand him guilty. The problem is that the public, according to every measure of its opinions, condemns Congress for impeaching the President much more harshly than it condemns the President for his misdeeds.
The third is censure, favored by the Democrats, who want to register their disapproval of the President without removing him from office.
The fourth, which has been invented more or less on the spot, is the idea of voting in the Senate on a so-called “finding of fact,” by which the Senate would formally define the President’s bad behavior even as, in a second vote, it would acquit him. Inasmuch as this “finding of fact”–more accurately named a “finding of conclusions” or a “finding of guilt” (inasmuch as the relevant facts were all found long ago)–can be passed by a simple majority, it amounts to an end-run around the inconvenient two-thirds rule.
Some Republicans, though, are unsatisfied with this innovation. Senator Orrin Hatch, for one, worries that if the Senate “finds that perjury and obstruction of justice are not removable” it would send the message that the Senate does not take these offenses seriously. He accordingly invented a variation of the fourth form of jeopardy, in which, after voting the censorious finding, the Senate would simply suspend the trial permanently, depriving Clinton of his acquittal. As part of this now-final judgment, Hatch would buttress the punishment value of impeachment by having the Senate go on record to the effect that “Impeachment Without Removal” (the apotheosis of this sanction through the use of capital letters is Hatch’s own) would be designated “the highest form of censure.” Here, in a perfect inversion of the rule that a person is innocent until proven guilty, mere accusation (impeachment) is formally transmuted by senatorial declaration not only into conviction but into the sentencing as well.
While all these constitutional novelties were being considered in the Senate, the never-sleeping Ken Starr was concocting a fifth form of punishment–indictment of the President even while he remains in office (as he will for two years after a failure to convict him in the Senate). Taking upon himself the power of judging Presidents that the Constitution gives to Congress, he was in effect saying to the Senate, “If you don’t convict him, I will.”
The sixth–and, perhaps, most keenly desired–form of punishment is the public humiliation of the President, not only before today’s citizens but before all history. With this demand, we leave the realm of law and politics behind and approach the psychosexual substrate–the smoldering, sulfurous, hidden core–of the scandal. Is there any pejorative in the English language that has not been applied to Clinton? Not since Hitler finished himself off in his bunker, it sometimes seems, has a public figure been excoriated as Clinton has. Just last week, Senator Robert Byrd, heaping up damning modifiers and metaphors with a repetitiousness that betrays obsession, announced that he sought a censure that would be “indelibly seared into the ineffaceable record of history for all future generations to see and to ponder”–a condemnation that “can never be erased” and, “like the mark that was set upon Cain, it will follow even beyond the grave.” And A.M. Rosenthal, outdoing in promiscuous fury even this verbal flogging, demanded, vampire-like, a judgment on Clinton that would leave a “bite mark” on him “through history.” To which one can only add that if the teethmarks are Rosenthal’s, poor Clinton will be at risk of rabies.
However, the main instrument of humiliation was the insistence by the House managers that the Senate either hear live witnesses or release videotapes of their depositions. Defending this demand, manager Asa Hutchinson commented that “only people who have been affected by this real-life drama, speaking from the heart,” can sway the senators’ “judgment.” And Hutchinson’s fellow manager Ed Bryant has famously declared, “Wouldn’t you want to observe the demeanor of Miss Lewinsky and test her credibility? Look into her eyes?”
Did the managers unconsciously remember, perhaps, that the entire scandal began with Clinton looking into Lewinsky’s eyes? Perhaps they had been afflicted by a similar longing. Like psychoanalysts, it seems, they wished to revisit–indeed, to re-enact–the scene that caused the trauma. Isn’t it somehow the measure of the folly of this crisis that, in obedience to a pathology we cannot quite put our finger on, the trial perhaps cannot end until almost the entire US government–the House managers, the full Senate, the Chief Justice of the United States–has, following in the misguided, reckless footsteps of Bill Clinton, gazed into the vacant eyes of Monica Lewinsky?
Jonathan SchellJonathan Schell (1943-2014) was the Lannan Fellow at The Nation Institute. His books include The Unconquerable World: Power, Nonviolence and the Will of the People, an analysis of people power, and The Seventh Decade: The New Shape of Nuclear Danger.