Read Impeached: The Trial of President Andrew Johnson and the Fight for Lincoln's Legacy Online

Authors: David O. Stewart

Tags: #Government, #Presidents & Heads of State, #Executive Branch, #General, #United States, #Political Science, #Biography & Autobiography, #19th Century, #History

Impeached: The Trial of President Andrew Johnson and the Fight for Lincoln's Legacy (37 page)

BOOK: Impeached: The Trial of President Andrew Johnson and the Fight for Lincoln's Legacy
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Moreover, Johnson’s acquittal did not mark the death of impeachment as a constitutional tool. The House impeached several federal judges between Johnson’s acquittal and 1935; some resigned and the Senate convicted two of them after trial. Richard Nixon resigned in 1974 rather than face near-certain impeachment and removal. The Johnson verdict did not prevent House Republicans from throwing the moralistic temper tantrum that led to the 1999 impeachment of Bill Clinton for actions totally unrelated to his official duties (though Clinton was acquitted by the Senate). Impeachment is an institutional safety valve, like the emergency lever in a train, to be used only in times of great exigency. Following the Johnson case, the safety valve continued to be available and continued to be used, rarely.

Based on the Johnson, Nixon, and Clinton cases, certain conditions seem to be necessary, if not sufficient, for presidential impeachment to be possible: Congress must be controlled by the opposing party, and the impeachers must be able to point to a legal violation by the president that can be portrayed as a crime. One further lesson from the Johnson and Clinton examples is that a president who has acted most unwisely can still avoid removal from office as long as he retains the support of his own party.

That presidential impeachment has been rare can hardly be attributed to Johnson’s acquittal. It arose once, briefly, before the Johnson case; it has been an infrequent concern since. The triumphant generalizations offered by many historians and commentators about the Johnson impeachment have been so ill founded because the case unfolded in unique circumstances. Never again would the nation face a prolonged political struggle over how to reunite with a breakaway region that had started a civil war; never again would the party opposing the president enjoy such lopsided majorities in Congress; never again would assassination elevate to the White House someone who truly belonged to the other political party. The remarkable achievement was that impeachment produced a peaceful resolution of the angry contest, not that it saved the presidency from being subjugated to Congress.

When it came to restoring the constitutional balance of the government, Johnson’s acquittal was far less important than Congress’s repeal of much of the Tenure of Office Act, which began shortly after Johnson left the White House. In response to President Grant’s demands, Congress promptly gave him control over firing Cabinet officers, and additional authority over the removal of lower officials. That controversial statute had, indeed, frozen some of the gears of government by stripping the president of the power to choose those who would implement his policies.

Almost sixty years later, the Supreme Court ruled on whether Senate approval could be required before specific executive officials could be fired—the constitutional issue that Johnson claimed he hoped to bring to the Supreme Court by replacing Edwin Stanton. In
Myers v. United States
, the Court held that the president could fire a postmaster without Senate approval. The Court’s opinion was written by the only former president to serve on the Supreme Court. Chief Justice William Howard Taft decried congressional encroachment on executive powers and denied that Congress could reserve for itself the power to approve the firing of Postmaster Myers. Dissenting opinions by liberal Louis D. Brandeis and archconservative James McReynolds shredded Taft’s historical arguments. As the dissenters saw it, Congress created executive offices under the Constitution, and established their salaries and duties. Why could Congress also not prescribe specific terms for those offices, or require Senate concurrence in the removal of the people holding them? The dissenters were not fazed by Taft’s insistence that it was unwise for the Senate to play a role in executive removals; wise or foolish, they insisted, the Constitution allowed it. Less than ten years later, the dissenters were partly vindicated after President Franklin Roosevelt dismissed the chairman of the Federal Trade Commission. The Supreme Court ruled that since Congress had created a five-year term for the position, the president could not fire the chairman before the end of his term.

Fourteen decades after Johnson’s trial, several features of that constitutional confrontation still resonate. Stevens, Butler, and the other Republicans gave life to the impeachment clause as a response to a national crisis. They showed that it could be used to challenge a president directly. In our era of an increasingly imperial presidency, it is a powerful example: the direct representatives of the people possess the ultimate tool for curbing executive excess. It is an unwieldy tool, but an essential one. By coming so close to a conviction, the impeachers established that there are limits on presidential discretion, that the nation need not wait until the end of a four-year term to jettison a president. They also deserve credit for accepting their defeat peacefully, without any call to arms, respecting the constitutional process.

The positive results of the unsuccessful impeachment should not be overlooked. The accusers—and their supporters—had the cathartic experience of haling Johnson before the Senate, displaying his failings to the nation and the judgment of history. The experience chastened the most powerful person in the nation, who had committed many blunders, whether or not they warranted his removal from office. Unless he had been battered by that constitutional two-by-four, Johnson might well have left the clownish Lorenzo Thomas as interim secretary of war and could have embarked on other spiteful and ill-considered actions. Moreover, though hysterical rhetoric filled the air, the impeachment process itself was legalistic and peaceable, a constitutional outlet for violent political passions.

After three serious attempts to impeach a president, though, we are no closer than Thad Stevens and Benjamin Curtis were to knowing exactly what conduct justifies presidential removal. Indeed, in many ways the phrase “high crimes and misdemeanors” has proved to be its own Rorschach blot, sufficiently imprecise to permit intelligent arguments that it requires a true judicial “crime,” or alternatively that it imposes no such requirement. But in the twenty-first century, when presidential powers have grown so vast and intrusive, it is an essential principle that
something
does.

In addition, though Johnson’s acquittal was mortifying to Stevens and his fellow impeachers, it stigmatized Johnson forever as the man who escaped removal by the skin of his teeth. That the key acquittal votes were won by political bargaining and patronage payoffs, or by bribes, marks him even more.

Also, though the immediate cause of the impeachment effort was the firing of Stanton, underlying it was the firm conviction held by many Republicans that Johnson was undermining the nation’s commitment to protect the freedmen and aid their emergence from slavery. That commitment would linger for only a few more years, then lie dormant for many decades. Yet it bears remembering that there were congressmen and senators in 1868 who almost drove a president from office in part because he would do nothing to stop the mistreatment of the former slaves.

Americans, perhaps all people, expect historical crises to be met by heroes—Washingtons, Franklins, Lincolns, and Roosevelts. A nation learns a great deal more about itself and its system of government when a crisis has to be met by people of lesser talents. In the impeachment crisis of 1868, none of the country’s leaders was great, a few were good, all were angry, and far too many were despicable. Still, we survived.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
 

I
SHOULD FIRST ACKNOWLEDGE
three writers who traveled these serpentine historical trails before I set off and who shed important light on the story I have tried to tell. Coming upon Michael Les Benedict’s
The Impeachment and Trial of Andrew Johnson
was a liberating moment. In this and other writings, Professor Benedict persuasively concludes that the Johnson impeachment effort was not the historical atrocity of popular myth. Equivalent liberation came from Mark W. Summers’s
The Era of Good Stealings
, in which a serious scholar (arguably
the
serious scholar of American public corruption in the nineteenth century) takes seriously the possibility that bribery influenced the Senate impeachment vote. Finally, I must recognize Hans Trefousse, author of a half-dozen distinguished books about this historical period. On any subject central to this story—Andrew Johnson, Thaddeus Stevens, Ben Butler, Ben Wade, the impeachment trial itself—Professor Trefousse has published an important treatment. He has been courteous and generous in discussing this project with me. It is a gratifying coincidence that he and I are both graduates of George W. Curtis High School on Staten Island, where I took AP English from his late wife, Rachelle Trefousse. I learned much from both of them.

I have benefited from a great deal of help from archivists and reference librarians all around the country. These include most of the staff at the Library of Congress, of whom Thomas Mann is the most conspicuous and most consistently remarkable. Judy Atkins at the National Archives found records of the House impeachment managers that I have not seen cited by any other researchers. Teresa Coble of the Kansas State Historical Society, William A. Jones of the library at California State University, Chico, and Mark Patrick of the Detroit Public Library were generous and responsive in my efforts to track down the more obscure rascals of this story. Through Jodi Boyle, I received an early look at the Riggs Bank records at George Washington University. Great on-site support was available at the Huntington Library and Bancroft Library in California, the Wheaton College Library, the New York Public Library, and the New York Historical Society. Donald Ritchie of the Senate Historical Office graciously made available the resources of his office. I am also grateful for assistance from the Tennessee State Library and Archives, the Wisconsin Historical Society, the Massachusetts Historical Society, and Yale University Library. Bob McAvoy, whom I encountered through the genealogical wonders of the Internet, provided welcome leads on the elusive General Alonzo Adams.

Many friends provided insightful critiques of this book while it was in progress, beginning with James McGrath Morris, whose thoughts I sometimes resisted but usually came to embrace. Among those who have reminded me to tell the story clearly are Don Carr, Catherine Flanagan, Solveig Eggerz, Wayland Stallard, Katherine Lorr, Phil Harvey, Susan Clark, Joye Shepherd, Frank Joseph, Leslie Rollins, Robert Gibson, Linda Morefield, Paul Vamvas, Ken Ackerman, and Andrew Dayton. I am grateful to all of them. I also benefitted from Doris Kearns Goodwin’s gracious counsel in trying to understand the course charted during the Johnson Administration by William Henry Seward.

This is my second book with Alice Mayhew, which is a stroke of unwarranted fortune for me. Her steady focus on what makes a good book, and her skill in putting those elements together, have been great gifts. The entire Simon & Schuster team—Roger Labrie, Karen Thompson, Dana Sloan, Katie Grinch, Gypsy da Silva, Fred Weimer—is unfailingly professional and talented. My agent, Philippa Brophy, has provided sound advice and guidance. My thanks to all.

My greatest debt, always, is to Nancy, my wife, who has learned to live with the guy pounding on the keyboard in the attic. She read the manuscript, with great discernment, more times than anyone should have to.

APPENDIX 1
 

THE IMPEACHMENT PROVISIONS IN THE CONSTITUTION

 

ARTICLE I:

 

Section 2:
The House of Representatives…shall have the sole Power of Impeachment.

 

 

Section 3:
The Senate shall have the sole Power to try all Impeachments. When sitting for that Purpose, they shall be on Oath or Affirmation. When the President of the United States is tried, the Chief Justice shall preside: And no Person shall be convicted without the Concurrence of two thirds of the Members present.

Judgment in Cases of Impeachment shall not extend further than to removal from Office, and disqualification to hold and enjoy any Office of honor, Trust or Profit under the United States: but the Party convicted shall nevertheless be liable and subject to Indictment, Trial, Judgment and Punishment, according to Law.

ARTICLE II:

 

Section 2:
The President shall…have Power to Grant Reprieves and Pardons for Offenses against the United States, except in Cases of Impeachment.

 

 

Section 4:
The President, Vice President and all civil Officers of the United States, shall be removed from Office on Impeachment for, and Conviction of, Treason, Bribery, or other high Crimes and Misdemeanors.

ARTICLE III:

 

Section 2:
The Trial of all Crimes, except in Cases of Impeachment, shall be by Jury.

APPENDIX 2
 

THE TENURE OF OFFICE ACT

 

CHAPTER 154, STATUTES AT LARGE, 39TH CONGRESS, 2D SESSION, MARCH 2, 1867

 

Section 1.
That every person holding any civil office to which he has been appointed by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, and every person who shall hereafter be appointed to any such office, and shall become duly qualified to act therein, is, and shall be entitled to hold such office until a successor shall have been in like manner appointed and duly qualified, except as herein otherwise provided:
Provided
, That the Secretaries of State, of the Treasury, of War, of the Navy, and of the Interior, the Postmaster-General, and the Attorney-General, shall hold their offices respectively for and during the term of the President by whom they may have been appointed and for one month thereafter, subject to removal by and with the advice and consent of the Senate.

 

 

Section 2. And be it further enacted
, That when any officer appointed as aforesaid, excepting Judges of the United States courts, shall, during a recess of the Senate, be shown, by evidence satisfactory to the President, to be guilty of misconduct in office, or crime, or for any reason shall become incapable or legally disqualified to perform its duties, in such case, and in no other, the President may suspend such officer and designate some suitable person to perform temporarily the duties of such office until the next meeting of the Senate, and until the case shall be acted upon by the Senate,…and in such case it shall be the duty of the President, within twenty days after the first day of such next meeting of the Senate, to report to the Senate such suspension, with the evidence and reasons for his action in the case, and the name of the person so designated to perform the duties of such office. And if the Senate shall concur in such suspension and advise and consent to the removal of such officer, they shall so certify to the President, who may thereupon remove such officer…. But if the Senate shall refuse to concur in such suspension, such officer so suspended shall forthwith resume the functions of his office….

 

 

Section 9
…[E]very person who shall violate any of the provisions of this section shall be deemed guilty of a high misdemeanor, and, upon trial and conviction thereof, shall be punished therefore by a fine not exceeding ten thousand dollars, or by imprisonment not exceeding ten years, or both said punishments, in the discretion of the court.

BOOK: Impeached: The Trial of President Andrew Johnson and the Fight for Lincoln's Legacy
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