Wednesday, May 13, 2026
Tuesday, May 12, 2026
UNFIT FOR OFFICE
Unfit for
Office
Donald Trump’s narcissism
makes it impossible for him to carry out the duties of the presidency in the
way the Constitution requires.
On a
third-down play last season, the
Washington Redskins quarterback Alex Smith stood in shotgun formation, five
yards behind the line of scrimmage. As he called his signals, a Houston Texans
cornerback, Kareem Jackson, suddenly sprinted forward from a position four
yards behind the defensive line.
Jackson’s timing was perfect. The ball
was snapped. The Texans’ left defensive end, J.J. Watt, sprinted to the
outside, taking the Redskins’ right tackle with him. The defensive tackle on
Watt’s right rushed to the inside, taking the offensive right guard with him.
The result was a huge gap in the Redskins’ line, through which Jackson could
run unblocked. He quickly sacked Smith, for a loss of 13 yards.
Special-teams players began taking the
field for the punt. But Smith didn’t get up. He rolled flat onto his back,
pulled off his helmet, and covered his face with his hands. He was clearly in
excruciating pain. The slow-motion replay immediately showed the television
audience why: As Smith was tackled, his right leg had buckled sharply above the
ankle, with his foot rotating significantly away from any direction in which a
human foot ought to point. The play-by-play announcer Greg Gumbel said grimly,
“We’ll be back,” and the network abruptly cut to a break. There was nothing
more to say.
Even without the benefit of medical
training, and even without conducting a physical examination, viewers knew what
had happened. They may not have known what the bones were called or what
treatment would be required, but they knew more than enough, and they knew what
really mattered: Smith had broken his leg, very badly. They knew that even if
they were not orthopedists, did not have a medical degree, and had never
cracked open a copy of Gray’s Anatomy. They could tell—they were
certain—something was seriously wrong.
And
so it is, or ought to be, with Donald Trump.
You don’t need to be a weatherman to know which way the wind blows, and you
don’t need to be a mental-health professional to see that something’s very
seriously off with Trump—particularly after nearly three years of watching his
erratic and abnormal behavior in the White House. Questions about Trump’s
psychological stability have mounted throughout his presidency. But those
questions have been coming even more frequently amid a recent escalation in Trump’s bizarre
behavior, as the pressures of his upcoming reelection campaign, a possibly
deteriorating economy, and now a full-blown impeachment inquiry have mounted.
And the questioners have included those who have worked most closely with him.
No president in recent memory—and
likely no president ever—has prompted more discussion about his mental
stability and connection with reality. Trump’s former chief of staff John Kelly
is said to have described him as “unhinged,” and “off the rails,” and to have called the White
House “Crazytown” because of Trump’s unbalanced state.
Trump’s former deputy attorney general, Rod Rosenstein, once reportedly discussed recruiting Cabinet members to
invoke the Twenty-Fifth Amendment, the Constitution’s provision addressing
presidential disability, including mental disability.
Rosenstein denies that claim, but it
is not the only such account. A senior administration official, writing
anonymously in The New York Times last September,
described how, “given the instability many witnessed, there were early whispers
within the cabinet of invoking the 25th Amendment”—but “no one wanted to
precipitate a constitutional crisis.” And NBC News last week quoted someone familiar
with current discussions in the White House warning that there is “increasing
wariness that, as this impeachment inquiry drags out, the likelihood increases
that the president could respond erratically and become ‘unmanageable.’” In
September, a former White House official offered a similar assessment to a Business Insider reporter:
“No one knows what to expect from him anymore,” because “his mood changes from
one minute to the next based on some headline or tweet, and the next thing you
know his entire schedule gets tossed out the window. He’s losing his shit.”
Even a major investment bank has
gotten into the mix, albeit in a roundabout way: JPMorgan Chase has created a “Volfefe Index”—named after Trump’s bizarre May 2017 “covfefe” tweet—designed to quantify
the effect that Trump’s impulsive tweets have on interest-rate volatility. The
bank’s press release understatedly observed that its “volatility fair value
model” shows that “the president’s remarks on this social media platform [have]
played a statistically significant role in elevating implied volatility.”
The president isn’t simply volatile
and erratic, however—he’s also incapable of consistently telling the truth.
Those who work closely with him, and who aren’t in denial, must deal with
Trump’s lying about serious matters virtually every day. But as one former
official put it, they “are used to the president saying
things that aren’t true,” and have inured themselves to it. Trump’s own former
communications director Anthony Scaramucci has on multiple occasions described
Trump as a liar, once saying, “We … know he’s telling lies,” so “if
you want me to say he’s a liar, I’m happy to say he’s a liar.” He went on to
address Trump directly: “You should probably dial down the lying because you
don’t need to … So dial that down, and you’ll be doing a lot better.”
That was good advice, but clearly
wishful thinking. Trump simply can’t dial down the lying, or turn it off—even,
his own attorneys suggest, when false statements may be punished as crimes. A
lawyer who has represented him in business disputes once told me that Trump
couldn’t sensibly be allowed to speak with Special Counsel Robert Mueller,
because Trump would “lie his ass off”—in effect, that Trump simply wasn’t
capable of telling the truth, about anything, and that if he ever spoke to a
prosecutor, he’d talk himself into jail.
Trump’s lawyers in the Russia
investigation clearly agreed: As Bob Woodward recounts at length in his
book Fear, members of Trump’s criminal-defense team fought both
Trump and Mueller tooth and nail to keep Trump from being interviewed by the
Office of Special Counsel. A practice testimonial session ended with Trump
spouting wild, baseless assertions in a rage. Woodward quotes Trump’s outside
counsel John Dowd as saying that Trump “just made something up” in response to
one question. “That’s his nature.” Woodward also recounts Dowd’s thinking when
he argued to Trump that the president was “not really capable” of answering
Mueller’s questions face to face. Dowd had “to dress it up as much as possible,
to say, it’s not your fault … He could not say what he knew was true: ‘You’re a
fucking liar.’ That was the problem.” (Dowd disputes this account.) Which
raises the question: If Trump can’t tell the truth even when it counts most,
with legal jeopardy on the line and lawyers there to help prepare him, is he
able to apprehend the truth at all?
Behavior like this is unusual, a point
that journalists across the political spectrum have made. “This is not
normal,” Megan McArdle wrote in late August. “And I
don’t mean that as in, ‘Trump is violating the shibboleths of the Washington
establishment.’ I mean that as in, ‘This is not normal for a functioning
adult.’” James Fallows observed, also in August, that
Trump is having “episodes of what would be called outright lunacy, if they
occurred in any other setting,” and that if he “were in virtually any
other position of responsibility, action would already be under way to
remove him from that role.”
Trump’s
erratic behavior has long been the
subject of political criticism, late-night-television jokes, and even
speculation about whether it’s part of some incomprehensible, multidimensional
strategic game. But it’s relevant to whether he’s fit for the office he holds.
Simply put, Trump’s ingrained and extreme behavioral characteristics make it
impossible for him to carry out the duties of the presidency in the way the
Constitution requires. To see why first requires a look at what the
Constitution demands of a president, and then an examination of how Trump’s
behavioral characteristics preclude his ability to fulfill those demands.
The Framers of the Constitution
expected the presidency to be occupied by special individuals, selfless people
of the highest character and ability. They intended the Electoral College to be
a truly deliberative body, not the largely ceremonial institution it has become
today. Because the Electoral College, unlike Congress and the state
legislatures, wouldn’t be a permanent body, and because it involved diffuse
selections made in the various states, they hoped it would help avoid “cabal,
intrigue and corruption,” as Alexander Hamilton put it in “Federalist No. 68,” and deter interference from
“these most deadly adversaries of republican government,” especially “from the
desire in foreign powers to gain an improper ascendant in our councils.”
Though the Constitution’s drafters
could hardly have foreseen how the system would evolve, they certainly knew the
kind of person they wanted it to produce. “The process of election affords a
moral certainty,” Hamilton wrote, “that the office of President will never fall
to the lot of any man who is not in an eminent degree endowed with the
requisite qualifications.” “Talents for low intrigue, and the little arts of
popularity,” might suffice for someone to be elected to the governorship of a
state, but not the presidency. Election would “require other talents, and a
different kind of merit,” to gain “the esteem and confidence of the whole
Union,” or enough of it to win the presidency. As a result, there would be “a
constant probability of seeing the station filled by characters pre-eminent for
ability and virtue.” This was the Framers’ goal in designing the system that
would make “the choice of the person to whom so important a trust was to be
confided.”
Hamilton’s use of the word trust in The
Federalist Papers to describe the presidency was no accident. The
Framers intended that the president “be like a fiduciary, who must pursue the
public interest in good faith republican fashion rather than pursuing his
self-interest, and who must diligently and steadily execute Congress’s
commands,” as a recent Harvard Law Review article puts it. The concept is akin to the law of
private fiduciaries, which governs trustees of trusts and directors and
officers of corporations, an area that has been central to my legal practice as
a corporate litigator. “Indeed,” as the Harvard Law Review article
explains, “one might argue that what presents to us as private fiduciary law
today had some of its genesis in the law of public officeholding.” The
overarching principle is that a fiduciary—say, the CEO of a corporation—when
acting on behalf of a corporation, has to act in the corporation’s best
interests. Likewise, a trustee of a trust must use the assets for the benefit
of the beneficiary, and not himself (a fundamental rule, incidentally, that
Trump apparently couldn’t adhere to with his own charitable
foundation).
In providing for a national chief
executive, the Framers incorporated the very similar law of public
officeholding into his duties in two places in the Constitution—in Article II, Section 3 (the president “shall
take Care that the Laws be faithfully executed”), and in Article II, Section 1, Clause 8, which requires
the president to “solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will faithfully execute the
Office of President of the United States.” That language—particularly the
words faithfully execute—was in 1787 “very commonly associated with
the performance of public and private offices,” the Harvard Law
Review article points out, and “anyone experienced in law or
government” at that time would have recognized what it meant, “because it was
so basic to … the law of executive officeholding.” In a nutshell, while
carrying out his official duties, a president has to put the country, not
himself, first; he must faithfully follow and enforce the law; and he must act
with the utmost care in doing all that.
But
can Trump do all that? Does his personality
allow him to? Answering those questions doesn’t require mental-health
expertise, nor does it really require a diagnosis. You can make the argument
for Trump’s unfitness without assessing his mental health: Like James Fallows,
for example, you could just ask whether Trump would have been allowed to retain
any other job in light of his bizarre conduct. At the same time, the presence
of a mental disorder or disturbance doesn’t necessarily translate to
incapacity; to suggest otherwise would unfairly stigmatize tens of millions of
Americans. Someone battling a serious psychological ailment can unquestionably
function well, and even nobly, in high public office—including as president.
The country, in fact, has seen it: Abraham Lincoln endured “no mere case of the blues”; he
suffered such “terrible melancholly,” said one of his contemporaries, that “he
never dare[d] carry a knife in his pocket.” Many historians speculate that he
suffered from what we would now diagnose as clinical depression. Yet Lincoln’s
mechanisms for coping with his lifelong affliction may have supplied him with
the vision, the creativity, and the moral fortitude to save the nation, to
achieve for it a new birth of freedom. As a writer in this magazine once put it: Lincoln’s “political vision drew power
from personal experience … Prepared for defeat, and even for humiliation, he
insisted on seeing the truth of both his personal circumstances and the
national condition. And where the optimists of his time would fail, he would
succeed, envisioning and articulating a durable idea of free society.”
More than a diagnosis, what truly
matters, as Lincoln’s case shows, is the president’s behavioral characteristics
and personality traits. And understanding how people behave and think is not
the sole province of professionals; we all do it every day, with family
members, co-workers, and others. Nevertheless, how the mental-health community
goes about categorizing those characteristics and traits can provide helpful
guidance to laypeople by structuring our thinking about them.
And that’s where the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders comes
into play. The DSM, now in its fifth edition, “contains
descriptions, symptoms, and other criteria for diagnosing mental disorders,”
and serves as the country’s “authoritative guide to the diagnosis of mental
disorders.” What’s useful for nonprofessionals is that, for the most part, it’s
written in plain English, and its criteria consist largely of observable
behaviors—words and actions.
That’s especially true of its criteria
for personality disorders—they don’t require a person to lie on a couch and
confess his or her innermost thoughts. They turn on how a person behaves in the
wild, so to speak. If anything, a patient’s confessions in an office may
disadvantage a clinician, because patients can and do conceal from clinicians
central aspects of their true selves. If you can observe people going about
their everyday business, you’ll know a lot more about how they act and behave.
And Donald Trump, as president of the
United States, is probably the most observable and observed person in the
world. I’ve personally met and spoken with him only a few times, but anyone who
knows him will tell you that Trump, in a way, has no facade: What you see of
him publicly is what you get all the time, although you may get more of it in
private. Any intelligent person who watches Trump closely on television, and
pays careful attention to his words on Twitter and in the press, should be able
to tell you as much about his behavior as a mental-health professional could.
One scholarly paper has suggested that accounts
of a person’s behavior from laypeople who observe him might be more accurate than information from a
clinical interview, and that this is especially true when considering two
personality disorders in particular—what the DSM calls
narcissistic personality disorder and antisocial personality disorder. These
two disorders just happen to be the ones that have most commonly been ascribed
to Trump by mental-health professionals over the past four years. Of these two
disorders, the more commonly discussed when it comes to Trump is narcissistic
personality disorder, or NPD—pathological narcissism. It’s also more important
in considering Trump’s fitness for office, because it touches directly upon
whether Trump has the capacity to put anyone’s interests—including the
country’s and the Constitution’s—above his own.
Narcissus,
the Greek mythological figure, was a
boy who fell so in love with his own reflection in a pool of water that,
according to one version of the story, he jumped in and drowned. Psychiatrists
and psychologists now use the term narcissism to describe
feelings of self-importance and self-love. As Craig Malkin, a clinical
psychologist who has written extensively on the subject, has
explained, narcissism is a trait that, to some extent, all human beings have:
“the drive to feel special, to stand out from … other[s] … to feel exceptional
or unique.”
A certain amount of narcissism is
healthy, and helpful—it brings with it confidence, optimism, and boldness.
Someone with more than an average amount of narcissism may be called a
narcissist. Many politicians, and many celebrities, could be considered narcissists;
presidents seem especially likely to “rank high in extroverted narcissism,”
Malkin writes, although they have varied greatly in the degree of their
narcissism. But extreme narcissism can be pathological, an illness—and
potentially a danger, as it was for Narcissus. “Pathological narcissism begins
when people become so addicted to feeling special that, just like with any
drug, they’ll do anything to get their ‘high,’ including lie, steal, cheat,
betray, and even hurt those closest to them,” Malkin says.
The “fundamental life goal” of an
extreme narcissist “is to promote the greatness of the self, for all to
see,” the psychologist Dan P. McAdams wrote in The
Atlantic. To many mental-health professionals, Donald Trump
provides a perfect example of such extreme, pathological narcissism: One
clinical psychologist told Vanity Fair that he
considers Trump such a “classic” pathological narcissist that he is actually
“archiving video clips of him to use in workshops because there’s no better
example” of the characteristics of the disorder he displays. “Otherwise,” this
clinician explained, “I would have had to hire actors and write vignettes. He’s
like a dream come true.” Another clinical psychologist said that Trump displays
“textbook narcissistic personality disorder.”
Not everyone agrees that Trump meets
the diagnostic criteria for NPD. Allen Frances, a psychiatrist who helped write
the disorder’s entry in the DSM, has argued that a mental
“disturbance” becomes a “disorder” only when, as the DSM puts
it, the affliction “causes clinically significant distress or impairment in
social, occupational, or other important areas of functioning.” The idea behind
this threshold is to separate “mild forms” of problems from pathological ones,
“in the absence of clear biological markers or clinically useful measurements
of severity for many mental disorders.”
In Frances’s view, that dividing line
disqualifies Trump from having a disorder, particularly NPD. Trump “may be a
world-class narcissist,” he has written, “but this doesn’t make him mentally
ill, because he does not suffer from the distress and impairment required to
diagnose mental disorder. Mr. Trump causes severe distress rather than
experiencing it and has been richly rewarded, rather than punished, for his
grandiosity, self-absorption and lack of empathy.”
But from the perspective of the public
at large, the debate over whether Trump meets the clinical diagnostic criteria
for NPD—or whether psychiatrists can and should answer that question without
directly examining him—is beside the point. The goal of a diagnosis is to help
a clinician guide treatment. The question facing the public is very different:
Does the president of the United States exhibit a consistent pattern of
behavior that suggests he is incapable of properly discharging the duties of
his office?
Even Trump’s own allies recognize the
degree of his narcissism. When he launched racist attacks on four congresswomen
of color, Senator Lindsey Graham explained, “That’s just the way he is. It’s more
narcissism than anything else.” So, too, do skeptics of assigning a clinical
diagnosis. “No one is denying,” Frances told Rolling Stone, “that he is as
narcissistic an individual as one is ever likely to encounter.” The president’s
exceptional narcissism is his defining characteristic—and understanding that is
crucial to evaluating his fitness for office.
The DSM-5 describes
its conception of pathological narcissism this way: “The essential feature of
narcissistic personality disorder is a pervasive pattern of grandiosity, need
for admiration, and lack of empathy that begins by early adulthood and is
present in a variety of contexts.” The manual sets out nine diagnostic criteria
that are indicative of the disorder, but only five of the nine need be present
for a diagnosis of NPD to be made. Here are the nine:
1. Has a grandiose sense of self-importance (e.g.,
exaggerates achievements and talents, expects to be recognized as superior
without commensurate achievements).
2. Is preoccupied with fantasies of unlimited success,
power, brilliance, beauty, or ideal love.
3. Believes that he or she is “special” and unique and can
only be understood by, or should associate with, other special or high-status
people (or institutions).
4. Requires excessive admiration.
5. Has a sense of entitlement (i.e., unreasonable
expectations of especially favorable treatment or automatic compliance with his
or her expectations).
6. Is interpersonally exploitative (i.e., takes advantage
of others to achieve his or her own ends)
7. Lacks empathy: is unwilling to recognize or identify
with the feelings or needs of others.
8. Is often envious of others or believes that others are
envious of him or her.
9. Shows arrogant, haughty behaviors or attitudes.
These criteria are accompanied by
explanatory notes that seem relevant here: “Vulnerability in self-esteem makes
individuals with narcissistic personality disorder very sensitive to ‘injury’
from criticism or defeat.” And “criticism may haunt these individuals and may
leave them feeling humiliated, degraded, hollow and empty. They may react with
disdain, rage, or defiant counterattack.” The manual warns, moreover, that
“interpersonal relations are typically impaired because of problems derived
from entitlement, the need for admiration, and the relative disregard for the
sensitivities of others.” And, the DSM-5 adds, “though
overweening ambition and confidence may lead to high achievement, performance
may be disrupted because of intolerance of criticism or defeat.”
The diagnostic criteria offer a useful
framework for understanding the most remarkable features of Donald Trump’s
personality, and of his presidency. (1) Exaggerates achievements and
talents, expects to be recognized as superior without commensurate achievements?
(2) Preoccupied with fantasies of unlimited success, power, brilliance? (3)
Believes that he or she is “special” and unique and should only associate with
other special or high-status people? That’s Trump, to a T. As Trump
himself might put it, he exaggerates accomplishments better than anyone. In
July, he described himself in a tweet as “so great looking and smart, a
true Stable Genius!” (Exclamation point his, of course.) That “stable genius” self-description is one that
Trump has repeated over and over again—even though he has trouble with spelling, doesn’t know the difference between a
hyphen and an apostrophe, doesn’t appear to understand fractions, needs
basic geography lessons, speaks at the level of a fourth grader, and engages in “serial misuse of public language” and “cannot
write sentences,” and even though members of his own administration have variously
considered him to be a “moron,” an “idiot,” a “dope,” “dumb as shit,” and a
person with the intelligence of a “kindergartener” or a “fifth or sixth grader”
or an “11-year-old child.”
Trump wants
everyone to know: He’s “the super genius of all time,” one of “the
smartest people anywhere in the world.” Not only that, but he considers himself
a hero of sorts. He avoided military service, yet claims he would have run, unarmed, into a
school during a mass shooting. Speaking to a group of emergency medical workers
who had lost friends and colleagues on 9/11, he claimed, falsely, to have “spent a lot
of time down there with you,” while generously allowing that “I’m not
considering myself a first responder.” He has spoken, perhaps jokingly, perhaps
not, about awarding himself the Medal of Honor.
Trump claims to be an expert—the
world’s greatest—in anything and everything. As one video
mash-up shows, Trump has at various times claimed—in all
seriousness—that no one knows more than he does about: taxes, income,
construction, campaign finance, drones, technology, infrastructure, work visas,
the Islamic State, “things” generally, environmental-impact statements,
Facebook, renewable energy, polls, courts, steelworkers, golf, banks, trade,
nuclear weapons, tax law, lawsuits, currency devaluation, money, “the system,”
debt, and politicians. Trump described his admission as a transfer student into
Wharton’s undergraduate program as “super genius stuff,” even though he didn’t
strike the admissions officer who approved his candidacy as a “genius,” let
alone a “super genius”; Trump claimed to have “heard I was first in my
class” at Wharton, despite the fact that his name didn’t appear on the dean’s list
there, or in the commencement program’s list of graduates receiving honors. And Trump, through an invented
spokesman, even lied his way onto the Forbes 400.
(4) Requires excessive admiration? Last Thanksgiving, Trump was asked
what he was most thankful for. His answer: himself, of course. A number of years ago, he
made a video for Forbes in which he
interviewed two of his children. The interview topic: how great they thought Donald Trump was.
When his own father died, in 1999, Trump gave one of the eulogies. As Alan
Marcus, a former Trump adviser, recounted the story to Timothy O’Brien, he began “more or less like
this: ‘I was in my Trump Tower apartment reading about how I was having the
greatest year in my career in The New York Times when the
security desk called to say my brother Robert was coming upstairs’”—an
introductory line that provoked “‘an audible gasp’ from mourners stunned by
Trump’s self-regard.” According to a Rolling Stone article,
other eulogists spoke about the deceased, but Trump “used the time to talk
about his own accomplishments and to make it clear that, in his mind, his
father’s best achievement was producing him, Donald.” The author of a book
about the Trump family described the funeral as one that “wasn’t
about Fred Trump,” but rather “was an opportunity to do some brand burnishing
by Donald, for Donald. Throughout his remarks, the first-person singular
pronouns—I and me and mine—far outnumbered he and his. Even at his own father’s
funeral, Donald Trump couldn’t cede the limelight.”
And he still can’t. Here’s a man who
holds rallies with no elections in sight, so that he can bask in his
supporters’ cheers; even when elections are near, and he’s supposed to be
helping other candidates, he consistently keeps the focus on himself. He loves
to watch replays of himself at the rallies,
and “luxuriates in the moments he believes are evidence of his
brilliance.” In July, after his controversial, publicly funded,
campaign-style Independence Day celebration, Trump tweeted, “Our Country is the envy of the World.
Thank you, Mr. President!” In February 2017, Trump was given a private tour of
the newly opened National Museum of African American History and Culture, and
paused in front of an exhibit on the Dutch role in the slave trade. He turned
to the museum’s director and said, “You know, they love me in the
Netherlands.”
(5) A sense of entitlement? (9) Arrogant, haughty
behaviors? Trump is the man who, on the infamous Access Hollywood tape, said, “When
you’re a star, they let you do it. You can do anything you want”—including
grabbing women by their genitals. He’s the man who also once said, “I could stand in the middle of Fifth
Avenue and shoot somebody and I wouldn’t lose any voters.” (8) Envious
of others? Here’s a man so unable to stand the praise received by a
respected war hero and statesman, Senator John McCain, that he has continued to attack McCain months
after McCain’s death; his jealousy led White House staff to direct the Pentagon to keep a destroyer
called the USS John S. McCain out of Trump’s line of sight during a
presidential visit to an American naval base in Japan. And Trump, despite being
president, still seems envious of President Barack Obama. (6)
Interpersonally exploitative? Just watch the Access Hollywood tape,
or ask any of the hundreds of contractors and employees Trump
the businessman allegedly stiffed, or speak with any of the two dozen women who have accused Trump of
sexual misconduct, sexual assault, or rape. (Trump has denied all their
claims.)
Finally, (7) Lacks empathy: is
unwilling to recognize or identify with the feelings or needs of others?
One of the most striking aspects of Trump’s personality is his utter and
complete lack of empathy. By empathy, psychologists and psychiatrists
mean the ability to understand or relate to what someone else is
experiencing—the capacity to envision someone else’s feelings, perceptions, and
thoughts.
The notorious lawyer and fixer Roy
Cohn, who once counseled Trump, said that “Donald pisses ice water,” and
indeed, examples of Trump’s utter lack of normal human empathy abound. Trump himself has told the
story of a charity ball—an “incredible ball”—he once held at
Mar-a-Lago for the Red Cross. “So what happens is, this guy falls off right on
his face, hits his head, and I thought he died … His wife is screaming—she’s
sitting right next to him, and she’s screaming.” By his own account,
Trump’s concern wasn’t the poor man’s well-being or his wife’s. It was the
bloody mess on his expensive floor. “You know, beautiful marble floor, didn’t
look like it. It changed color. Became very red … I said, ‘Oh, my God, that’s
disgusting,’ and I turned away. I couldn’t, you know, he was right in front of
me and I turned away.” Trump describes himself as saying, after the injured man
was hauled away on a makeshift stretcher, “‘Get that blood cleaned up! It’s
disgusting!’ The next day, I forgot to call [the man] to say is he okay … It’s
just not my thing.”
And then there was 9/11. Trump
gave an
extraordinary call-in interview to a metropolitan–New York
television station just hours after the Twin Towers collapsed. He was asked
whether one of his downtown buildings, 40 Wall Street, had suffered any damage.
Trump’s immediate response was to brag about the
building’s brand-new ranking among New York skyscrapers: “40 Wall Street
actually was the second-tallest building in downtown Manhattan, and it was
actually, before the World Trade Center, was the tallest—and then when they built
the World Trade Center, it became known as the second-tallest. And now it’s the
tallest.” (This wasn’t even true—a building a block away from
Trump’s, 70 Pine Street, was a little taller.)
That human empathy isn’t Trump’s thing
has been demonstrated time and again during his presidency as well. In October
2017, he reportedly told the widow of a serviceman killed in
action “something to the effect that ‘he knew what he was
getting into when he signed up, but I guess it hurts anyway.’” (Trump
later claimed that this account was “fabricated …
Sad!” and that “I have proof,” but of course he never produced any.) On a less
macabre note, on Christmas Eve last year, Trump took calls on NORAD’s Santa
Tracker phone line, which children call to find out where Santa Claus is as he
makes his rounds. Trump asked a 7-year-old girl from South
Carolina: “Are you still a believer in Santa? Because at 7, it’s marginal,
right?”
According to Woodward’s Fear,
when Trump’s first chief of staff, Reince Priebus, resigned, he found out about
his replacement when he saw a tweet from Trump saying that he had appointed
John Kelly as the new chief of staff—moments after Priebus and Trump had spoken
about waiting to announce the news. Kelly was appalled, and that night
apologetically told Priebus, “I’d never do this to you. I’d never been offered
this job until the tweet came out. I would have told you.” His predecessor,
though, wasn’t surprised. “It made no sense, Priebus realized, unless you
understood … ‘The president has zero psychological ability to recognize empathy
or pity in any way.’”
Priebus apparently isn’t the only
White House staffer to have learned this; in February 2018, when Trump met with
survivors of the Parkland, Florida, school shooting and their loved ones, his
communications aide actually gave him a note card that made clear that
“the president needed to be reminded to show compassion and understanding to
traumatized survivors,” as The New York Times put it. The
empathy cheat sheet contained a reminder to say such things as “I hear you.”
One aide to President Obama told the Times that had she and
her colleagues given their boss such a reminder card, “he would have looked at
us like we were crazy people.”
Most recently, in July of this year,
in a stunning scene captured on video, Trump met in the Oval Office with the
human-rights activist Nadia Murad, a Yazidi Iraqi who had been captured, raped,
and tortured by the Islamic State, and had won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2018
for speaking out about the plight of the Yazidis and other victims of genocide
and religious persecution. Her voice breaking, she implored the president of
the United States to help her people return safely to Iraq. Trump could barely
look her in the eye. She told him that ISIS had murdered her mother and six
brothers. Trump, apparently not paying much attention, asked, “Where are they
now?” “They killed them,” she said once again. “They are in the mass grave in
Sinjar, and I’m still fighting just to live in safety.” Trump, who has publicly said that he deserves the Nobel
Peace Prize, seemed interested in the conversation only at the end, when he
asked Murad about why she won the prize.
Another equally unforgettable video
documents Trump visiting Puerto Rico shortly after Hurricane Maria, tossing rolls of paper towels into a crowd
of victims. He later responded vindictively to charges that his
administration hadn’t done enough to help the island, prompting the mayor of
San Juan to observe that Trump had “augmented” Puerto Rico’s “devastating human
crisis … because he made it about himself, not about saving our lives,” and
because “when expected to show empathy he showed disdain and lack of respect.”
In October 2018, a gunman burst into
Shabbat morning services at a Jewish synagogue in Pittsburgh and sprayed
worshippers with semiautomatic-rifle and pistol fire. Eleven people died. Three
days later, the president and first lady visited the community, and the day
after that, the first thing Trump tweeted about the
visit was this: “Melania and I were treated very nicely yesterday in
Pittsburgh. The Office of the President was shown great respect on a very sad
& solemn day. We were treated so warmly. Small protest was not seen by us,
staged far away. The Fake News stories were just the opposite—Disgraceful!”
Similarly, after gunmen killed dozens in the span of a single August weekend in
Dayton, Ohio, and El Paso, Texas, Trump went on a one-day sympathy tour that
was marked by attacks on his hosts and on political enemies, and an obsessive focus on himself.
What kind of human being, let alone
politician, would engage in such unempathetic, self-centered behavior while
memorializing such horrible tragedies? Only the most narcissistic person
imaginable—or a person whose narcissism would be difficult to imagine if we
hadn’t seen it ourselves. The evidence of Trump’s narcissism is
overwhelming—indeed, it would be a gargantuan task to try to marshal all of it,
especially as it mounts each and every day.
Yet
pathological narcissism is not the only
personality disorder that Trump’s behavior clearly indicates. A second disorder
also frequently ascribed to Trump by professionals is sociopathy—what the DSM-5 calls
antisocial personality disorder. As described by Lance Dodes, a former
assistant clinical professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School,
“sociopathy is among the most severe mental disturbances.” Central to
sociopathy is a complete lack of empathy—along with “an absence of guilt.”
Sociopaths engage in “intentional manipulation, and controlling or even
sadistically harming others for personal power or gratification. People with
sociopathic traits have a flaw in the basic nature of human beings … They are
lacking an essential part of being human.” For its part, the DSM-5 states
that the “essential feature of antisocial personality disorder is a pervasive
pattern of disregard for, and violation of, the rights of others that begins in
childhood or early adolescence and continues into adulthood.”
The question of whether Trump can
serve as a national fiduciary turns more on his narcissistic tendencies than
his sociopathic ones, but Trump’s sociopathic characteristics sufficiently
intertwine with his narcissistic ones that they deserve mention here. These
include, to quote the DSM-5, “deceitfulness, as indicated by
repeated lying, use of aliases, or conning others.” Trump’s deceitfulness—his
lying—has become the stuff of legend; journalists track his “false and
misleading claims” as president by the thousands upon thousands. Aliases? For years, Trump would call journalists while posing
as imaginary PR men, “John Barron” and “John Miller,” so that he could plant false stories about being
wealthy, brilliant, and sexually accomplished. Trump was, and remains, a
con artist: Think of Trump University, which even Trump’s own employees described as a scam (and
which sparked a lawsuit that resulted in a $25 million settlement, although
with no admission of wrongdoing). There’s ACN, an alleged Ponzi scheme Trump promoted, and
from which he made millions (he, his company, and his family deny the
allegations of fraud); and the border wall that hasn’t been built and that Mexico’s never
going to pay for. Trump is a pathological liar if ever there was one.
Other criteria for antisocial
personality disorder include “failure to conform to social norms with respect
to lawful behaviors, as indicated by repeatedly performing acts that are
grounds for arrest”; “impulsivity or failure to plan ahead”; and “lack of
remorse, as indicated by being indifferent to or rationalizing having hurt,
mistreated, or stolen from another.” Check, check, and check: As for social
norms and lawful behaviors, there are all the accusations of sexual misconduct.
Also relevant is what the Mueller
report says about Trump’s efforts to derail the Justice
Department’s investigation into Russian interference in the last presidential
election. And given what federal prosecutors in New York said about his role
in directing hush money to be paid to the porn
star Stormy Daniels, a strong case can be made that Trump has committed
multiple acts of obstruction of justice and criminal violations of campaign-finance laws.
Were he not president, and were it not for two Justice Department opinions holding that a
sitting president cannot be indicted, he might well be facing criminal charges now.
As for impulsivity, that essentially
describes what gets him into trouble most: It was his “impulsiveness—actually, total recklessness”—that
came close to destroying him in the 1980s. In “response to his surging
celebrity,” Trump, “acquisitive to the point of recklessness,” engaged in “a
series of manic, ill-advised ventures” that “nearly did him in,” Politico reported.
His impulsiveness has buffeted his presidency as well: Think of his first
ordering, then calling off, the bombing of Iran in June, and his
aborted meeting with the Taliban at Camp David just
last month. And remember the racist tweets he sent in mid-July in which he told four
nonwhite representatives—three of whom were born in the United States—to “go
back” to the “countries” they “originally came from.” Those tweets were apparently triggered by something he saw on
TV.
Or consider his impetuous, unvetted
personnel decisions, such as his failed selection of Rear Admiral Ronny Jackson, the former White House
physician, as Veterans Affairs secretary, and his choice of Representative John Ratcliffe as
director of national intelligence. It was just so on The Apprentice,
where editors and producers found that “Trump was frequently unprepared” for
tapings, and frequently fired strong contestants “on a whim,” which
required them “to ‘reverse engineer’ the episode, scouring hundreds of hours of
footage … in an attempt to assemble an artificial version of history in which
Trump’s shoot-from-the-hip decision made sense.” One editor remarked that he
found “it strangely validating that they’re doing the same thing in the White
House.” Trump sees none of this as a problem; to the contrary, he prides
himself on following his instincts, once telling an interviewer: “I have a gut, and
my gut tells me more sometimes than anybody’s brain can ever tell me.”
And lack of remorse? That’s a hallmark
of sociopathy, and goes hand in hand with a lack of human conscience. In a
narcissistic sociopath, it’s intertwined with a lack of empathy. Trump hardly
ever shows remorse, or apologizes, for anything. The one exception: With his
presidential candidacy on the line in early October 2016, Trump expressed regret for the Access
Hollywood video. But within weeks, almost as soon as the campaign was
over, Trump began claiming, to multiple people, that the
video may have been doctored—a preposterous lie, especially since he had
acknowledged that the voice was his, others had confirmed this as well, and
there was no evidence of tampering. “We don’t think that was my voice,” he said
to a senator. The “we,” no doubt, was a lie as well.
Again, as with his narcissism, all
this evidence of Trump’s sociopathy only begins to tell the tale. The bottom
line is that this is a man who, over and over and over again, has indifferently mused about
the possibility of killing 10 million or so people in Afghanistan to end the
war there, while allowing that “I’m not looking to kill 10 million people”—as
though this were a realistic but merely less preferred option than, say,
raising import tariffs on chewing gum. As a 1997 profile of Trump in The New
Yorker put it, Trump has “an existence unmolested by the rumbling of a
soul.”
In a way, Trump’s sociopathic
tendencies are simply an extension of his extreme narcissism. Take the
pathological lying. Extreme narcissists aren’t necessarily pathological liars,
but they can be, and when they are, the lying supports the narcissism. As Lance
Dodes has put it, “People like Donald Trump who have
severe narcissistic disturbances can’t tolerate being criticized, so the more
they are challenged in this essential way, the more out of control they
become.” In particular, “They change reality to suit themselves in their own
mind.” Although Trump “lies because of his sociopathic tendencies,” telling
falsehoods to fool others, Dodes argues, he also lies to himself, to protect
himself from narcissistic injury. And so Donald Trump has lied about his net worth, the size of the crowd at his inauguration, and
supposed voter fraud in the 2016 election.
The latter kind of lying, Dodes says, “is in a
way more serious,” because it can indicate “a loose grip on reality”—and it may
well tell us where Trump is headed in the face of impeachment hearings. Lying
to prevent narcissistic injury can metastasize to a more significant loss
of touch with reality. As Craig Malkin puts it, when pathological narcissists “can’t
let go of their need to be admired or recognized, they have to bend or invent a
reality in which they remain special,” and they “can lose touch with reality in
subtle ways that become extremely dangerous over time.” They can become
“dangerously psychotic,” and “it’s just not always obvious until it’s too
late.”
Experts haven’t suggested that Trump
is psychotic, but many have contended that his narcissism and sociopathy are so
inordinate that he fits the bill for “malignant narcissism.” Malignant
narcissism isn’t recognized as an official diagnosis; it’s a
descriptive term coined by the psychoanalyst Erich Fromm, and expanded upon by
another psychoanalyst, Otto Kernberg, to refer to an extreme mix of narcissism
and sociopathy, with a degree of paranoia and sadism mixed in. One
psychoanalyst explains that “the malignant narcissist is
pathologically grandiose, lacking in conscience and behavioural regulation with
characteristic demonstrations of joyful cruelty and sadism.” In the view of
some in the mental-health community, such as John Gartner, Trump “exhibits all four”
components of malignant narcissism: “narcissism, paranoia, antisocial
personality and sadism.”
Mental-health professionals have
raised a variety of other concerns about Trump’s mental state; the last worth
specifically mentioning here is the possibility that, apart from any
personality disorder, he may be suffering cognitive decline. This is a serious matter:
Trump seems to be continually slurring words, and recently misread
teleprompters to say that the Continental Army secured airports during the American
Revolutionary War, and to say that the shooting in Dayton had occurred in Toledo. His overall level of
articulateness today doesn’t come close to what he exhibits in decades-old
television clips. But that could be caused by ordinary
age-related decline, stress, or other factors; to know whether something else
is going on, according to experts, would require a full
neuropsychological work-up, of the kind that Trump hasn’t yet had and, one
supposes, isn’t about to agree to.
But even that doesn’t exhaust all the
mental-health issues possibly indicated by Trump’s behavior. His “mental
state,” according to Justin A. Frank, a former clinical professor of psychiatry
and physician who wrote a book about Trump’s psychology, “include[s]
so many psychic afflictions” that a “working knowledge of psychiatric disorders
is essential to understanding Trump.” Indeed, as Gartner puts it: “There
are a lot of things wrong with him—and, together, they are a
scary witch’s brew.”
This
is a lot to digest. It would take entire
books to catalog all of Trump’s behavioral abnormalities and try to explain
them—some of which have already been written. But when you line up what the Framers
expected of a president with all that we know about Donald Trump, his unfitness
becomes obvious. The question is whether he can possibly act as a public
fiduciary for the nation’s highest public trust. To borrow from the Harvard
Law Review article, can he follow the “proscriptions
against profit, bad faith, and self-dealing,” manifest “a strong concern about
avoiding ultra vires action” (that is, action exceeding the president’s legal
authority), and maintain “a duty of diligence and carefulness”? Given that
Trump displays the extreme behavioral characteristics of a pathological
narcissist, a sociopath, or a malignant narcissist—take your pick—it’s clear
that he can’t.
To act as a fiduciary requires you to
put someone else’s interests above your own, and Trump’s personality makes it
impossible for him to do that. No president before him, at least in recent
memory, has ever displayed such obsessive self-regard. For Trump, Trump always
comes first. He places his interests over everyone else’s—including those of
the nation whose laws he swore to faithfully execute. That’s not consistent
with the duties of the president, whether considered from the standpoint of
constitutional law or psychology.
Indeed, Trump’s view of his
presidential powers can only be described as profoundly narcissistic, and his
narcissism has compelled him to disregard the Framers’ vision of his
constitutional duties in every respect. Bad faith? Trump has
repeatedly used executive powers, threatened to use executive powers, or
expressed the view that executive powers should be used to advance his personal
interests and punish his political opponents. Thus, for example, he has
placed restrictions on disaster aid to Puerto Rico
in apparent response to criticism of him and his administration; directed the Pentagon to reconsider whether
to award a $10 billion contract to Amazon because its CEO owns The
Washington Post, whose coverage he doesn’t like; threatened to take “regulatory and legislative” action against
Facebook, Google, and Twitter, because of their supposed “terrible bias”
against him; tried to get White House staff to tell the Justice
Department to try to block the merger between AT&T
and Time Warner in order to punish CNN for its coverage; attacked his first attorney general for
allowing the indictment of two Republican congressmen who had supported him;
and ordered the revocation of the security clearance of
a former CIA director who had criticized him.
And now, in just the past two weeks,
we’ve seen the pièce de résistance of bad faith, the one that’s brought Trump
to the verge of impeachment: Trump’s efforts to use his presidential
authority to strong-arm a foreign nation, Ukraine, into
digging up or concocting evidence in support of a preposterous conspiracy
theory about one of his principal challengers for the presidency, former Vice
President Joe Biden. As one political historian has put it, Trump’s use of his Article II authority
to pursue vendettas is “both a sign of deep insecurity … and also just a litany
of abuse of power,” and something no president has done “as consistently or as
viciously as Trump has.”
Profit? Self-dealing? Look at
the way Trump is using the presidency to advertise his real-estate
holdings—most notably and recently, his apparent determination to hold the next
G7 summit at the Trump Doral resort in Florida. Ultra vires? Trump
has made the outrageous claim that the Constitution gives him “the right to do whatever I want as president.”
Consistent with that view, he has repeatedly suggested that, by executive order, he can
overturn the Fourteenth Amendment’s guarantee of birthright citizenship—an
utterly lawless assertion. His core constitutional
obligations flow from Article II’s command that he faithfully execute the laws,
yet he has told subordinates not to worry about violating the laws. According
to one former senior administration official quoted in The New York Times,
Trump’s “constant instinct all the time was: Just do it, and if we get sued, we
get sued … Almost as if the first step is a lawsuit. I guess he thinks that
because that’s how business worked for him in the private sector. But federal
law is different, and there really isn’t a settling step when you break federal
law.” Federal law is also different, one might add, because he’s in charge of
upholding it.
Facing the approach of the 2020
election with not a single new mile of his border wall having been built,
Trump, as reported in The Washington Post,
has urged his aides to violate all manner of laws to expedite
construction—environmental laws, contracting laws, constitutional limitations
on the taking of private property—and “has told worried subordinates that he
will pardon them of any potential wrongdoing” they commit along the way.
A duty of diligence and carefulness? Trump is purely impulsive, and
incapable of planning or serious forethought, and his compulsion for lying has
enervated any capacity for thoughtful analysis he may have ever had. He
apparently won’t read anything; he himself has said, in regard to briefings,
that he prefers to read “as little as possible”—despite occupying what David A. Graham calls “one of the most
demanding jobs in the world” precisely because its “holder is
expected to consume, digest, and absorb prodigious amounts of information via
reading.”
And then there’s the question of
honesty. Fiduciaries must be honest. The Framers understood, based upon the law of public
officeholding in their time, that “faithful execution” of the laws requires
“the absence of bad faith through honesty.” In the private realm, fiduciaries
owe a duty of candor, of truth-telling; the standard of behavior was once memorably described by the renowned jurist Benjamin Cardozo as
“not honesty alone, but the punctilio of an honor the most sensitive.” Today,
in my own practice area of corporate litigation, corporate officers and
directors, as fiduciaries, owe duties that include a duty to disclose material information truthfully
and completely. Trump, whose lawyers wouldn’t dare allow him to
speak to the special counsel lest he make a prosecutable false statement,
couldn’t pass this standard to save his life.
Trump’s incapacity affects all manner
of subjects addressed by the presidency, but can be seen most acutely in
foreign affairs and national security. Presidential narcissism and personal ego
have frequently displaced the national interest. Today, the most obvious—and
stunning—example is his conduct toward Ukraine: While trying to pressure the
Ukrainian president to restart an investigation against Biden, Trump ordered
the withholding of vital military aid to that country, thus weakening its
ability to withstand Russian aggression and undermining the interests of the
United States. But the list goes on: Last summer, in a narcissistic effort at
self-aggrandizement, Trump told the Pakistani prime minister about a
conversation he had with the Indian prime minister—leading India to deny, indignantly, that any such conversation
had ever taken place. Trump reportedly even lied about trade talks with China—announcing
that phone calls had occurred that never occurred and that the Chinese denied took place—in an apparent attempt to pump
up the stock market and take credit for it.
Trump’s penchant for vendettas also
doesn’t stop at the water’s edge—American interests be damned. When
confidential cables sent by the United Kingdom’s ambassador to his government
were leaked, and were revealed to contain uncomplimentary (but
obvious) observations about Trump’s ineptitude and emotional insecurity, and
the dysfunction of his administration, Trump went on an extended Twitter tirade
against the ambassador, calling him “wacky” and “a very stupid guy,” “a pompous fool,” and ultimately declared: “We
will no longer deal with him.” When reports surfaced that Trump was interested
in having the United States purchase Greenland from Denmark, and the Danish
prime minister understandably described talk about such a purchase as “an absurd discussion” in light of Greenland’s
position on the matter, Trump canceled a visit to Denmark, and then attacked
the prime minister, calling her comments “nasty”; for good measure,
he also attacked some of America’s NATO allies.
At the same time, Trump happily
succumbs to flattery from America’s enemies; he received “beautiful … great
letters” from North Korea’s dictator, Kim Jong Un, and therefore “fell in love” with him, and rewards him with kind words and meetings even as North
Korea continues to develop new nuclear weapons and delivery systems. Of Russia’s president,
Vladimir Putin, Trump once said on television: “If he says
great things about me, I’m going to say great things about him.”
Putin, of course, did more than say
great things about Trump, which brings up what was, until the Ukraine scandal
surfaced, the most significant way in which Trump’s extraordinary narcissism
influenced his presidency—the Russia investigation. Trump made that
investigation about himself, and in the course of doing so, committed what
appear to be unmistakably criminal acts. At the outset, the Mueller
investigation wasn’t about what Donald Trump had done during the 2016 U.S.
presidential campaign. It was primarily an investigation about what the
Russians had done to interfere with that election and to help the
Trump campaign. At its core, it was a counterintelligence investigation—an
effort to protect the country, to defend our democracy. An effort to find out
exactly what a hostile foreign power had done to attack the United States, so
that our nation could fight back, and so that it could take measures to ensure
that such an attack never happened again.
But Trump didn’t see it that way. The
Mueller report repeatedly describes Trump’s self-obsession, and his disregard
for the national interest. Trump viewed “the intelligence community assessment
of Russian interference as a threat to the legitimacy of his electoral
victory.” He is said to have “viewed the Russia investigation as an attack on
the legitimacy of his win.” He thought it would “tak[e] away from what he had
accomplished.” The Washington Post has now reported,
moreover, that in the Oval Office in May 2017, Trump told the Russian foreign
minister and ambassador that he was unconcerned with Russia’s interference in the
2016 election.
And so, contrary to his obligation to
act in the nation’s interests rather than his own, and contrary to the criminal
code, he repeatedly tried to obstruct the investigation—and therefore,
ironically, put himself in the crosshairs of the investigation. Thanks to
Trump’s narcissism, the special counsel was forced to devote an entire volume
of his report—some 182 pages of single-spaced text—to Trump’s repeated and
persistent efforts to derail the investigation. And persistent, Trump was. He
tried to get Attorney General Jeff Sessions, who had recused himself from the
investigation, to violate ethics rules and unrecuse himself, so that he could
get rid of the special counsel and limit the investigation to future election
interference only. Trump tried to get his White House counsel to have the
acting attorney general remove Mueller on a ridiculous pretext, prompting the
counsel to threaten to resign. Trump tried to encourage witnesses to refuse to
cooperate with the very government that Trump himself heads. As I’ve argued elsewhere, in his efforts to derail the
Mueller investigation, Trump “did much more than this, but all of this is more
than enough: He committed the crime of obstructing justice—multiple times.”
Trump even obstructed justice about obstructing justice when he tried to get
the White House counsel to write a false account of Trump’s efforts to remove
Mueller.
All in all, Trump sought to impede and
end a significant counterintelligence and criminal investigation—one of crucial
importance to the nation—and did so for his own personal reasons. He did
precisely the opposite of what his duties require. Indeed, he has shown utter
contempt for his duties to the nation. How else could one describe the attitude
Trump expressed when, sitting next to Vladimir Putin in late June, he was asked
whether he would tell Putin not to interfere in the 2020 U.S. presidential election?
Trump smirked, wagged his finger playfully at Putin, and
said, “Don’t meddle in the election.” Putin smirked too. The Russian president
was in on the joke—the punch line being how Trump treats America’s interests
versus his own.
What constitutional mechanisms exist for
dealing with a president who cannot or does not comply with his duties, and how
should they take the president’s mental and behavioral characteristics into
account? One mechanism discussed with great frequency during the past three
years, including within the Trump administration, is Section 4 of the Twenty-Fifth Amendment. That provision allows
the vice president to become “Acting President” when the president is “unable
to discharge the powers and duties of his office.” But it doesn’t define what
such an inability entails; essentially, it lets the vice president and the
Cabinet, the president himself, and ultimately two-thirds of both houses of
Congress decide.
Certainly it would cover a coma. Had
the amendment been in effect in 1919 through 1921, it presumably could have
been used to deal with President Woodrow Wilson. A severe stroke had rendered
Wilson paralyzed on the left side, but he could still speak, and he could still sign
documents with his right hand. Nevertheless, although Wilson had “relatively
well preserved intellectual function,” the stroke rendered him “subject to ‘disorders
of emotion, impaired impulse control, and defective judgment.’”
Sound judgment, of course, is what a
president’s job is all about. And as Jeffrey Rosen has explained, “nothing in
the text or original understanding of the amendment” would prevent the vice
president, the Cabinet, or Congress from deciding that Trump has disorders of
emotion, impaired impulse control, defective judgment, or other behavioral or
psychological issues that keep him from carrying out his constitutional duties
the way they were meant to be carried out.
The problem is one of mechanics.
Section 4, quite understandably, was designed to be extremely difficult to
implement. The vice president and a majority of the Cabinet can determine that
the president isn’t able to carry out his duties; if so, the vice president
immediately becomes acting president. But if the president doesn’t agree—and
you know what Trump’s view will be, no matter what—then a constitutional game
of ping-pong starts: The president can certify that he is capable,
and he can reassume his authority after a four-day waiting period, unless the
vice president and the Cabinet, within that period, recertify that
the president can’t function. (As a new book on Section 4 explains, this
waiting period exists in part because “a deranged President could do a lot of
damage if he could retake power immediately,” and, in particular, he “would
also be able to fire the Cabinet, which would prevent it from contesting his
declaration of ability.”) If that happens, the vice president continues as
acting president, and the whole matter gets kicked to Congress, which must
assemble within 48 hours and decide within 21 days: If two-thirds of both
houses agree that the president can’t function, then the vice president
continues as acting president; if not, the president gets his authority back.
No matter how psychologically
incapable of meeting his constitutional obligations Trump may be, that route is
virtually certain not to work in this case. Would a vice president and department heads who have shamelessly
slaked Trump’s narcissistic thirst at Cabinet meetings by praising his supposed
greatness, and who of course owe their jobs to Trump, dare incur his wrath by
sparking a constitutional crisis on the basis of what they must surely know
about his unprecedented faults? Doubtful, to say the least. They would know
full well that, if their decision weren’t sustained by Congress, the first
thing that Trump would do after reassuming power would be to fire every
department head who sought to have him sidelined. (He can’t fire Vice President
Mike Pence, of course.) Which brings up the ultimate question upon which
successful invocation of Section 4 would turn: whether two-thirds of both
houses of Congress would vote to remove Trump. That’s harder than impeachment,
which requires only a simple majority of the House in order to bring charges of
impeachment to a trial in the Senate (which in turn can convict on a two-thirds
vote).
And so it turns out that impeachment
is a more practical mechanism for addressing the fact that Trump’s narcissism
and sociopathy render him unable to comply with the obligations of his office.
It’s also an appropriate mechanism, because the constitutional magic words
(other than Treason and Bribery) that form the
basis of an impeachment charge—high Crimes and Misdemeanors, found
in Article II, Section 4 of the
Constitution—mean something other than, and more than, offenses in the
criminal-statute books. High Crimes and Misdemeanors is a
legal term of art, one that historically referred to breaches of
duties—fiduciary duties—by public officeholders. In other words, the question
of what constitutes an impeachable offense for a president coincides precisely
with whether the president can execute his office in the faithful manner that
the Constitution requires.
The phrase high Crimes and
Misdemeanors was dropped into the draft Constitution on September 8, 1787, during the waning days of the
Constitutional Convention. The discussion before the Convention’s Committee of
Eleven was extremely brief. The extant version of what became Article II,
Section 4 provided for impeachment merely for treason and bribery. George Mason
objected, and proposed adding “maladministration.” Elbridge Gerry seconded
Mason’s proposal, but James Madison objected that it was too vague. Gouverneur
Morris chimed in, arguing that having a presidential election “every four years
will prevent maladministration.” Mason moved to add, according to Madison’s
notes, “other high crimes & misdemeanors (against the State).” The motion
passed, eight to three. And so, as a result of that brief exchange, Article II
of the Constitution of the United States provides that “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.”
As Yoni Appelbaum has observed in this magazine,
“constitutional lawyers have been arguing about what counts as a ‘high crime’
or ‘misdemeanor’ ever since.” One of the most compelling arguments about the
meaning of those words is that the Framers, in Article II’s command that a president
faithfully execute his office, imposed upon him fiduciary obligations. As the
constitutional historian Robert Natelson explained in the Federalist Society Review,
the “founding generation [understood] ‘high … Misdemeanors’ to mean ‘breach of
fiduciary duty.’” Eighteenth-century lawyers instead used terms such as breach
of trust—which describes the same thing. “Parliamentary articles of
impeachment explicitly and repetitively described the accused conduct as a
breach of trust,” Natelson argues, and 18th-century British legal commentators
explained how impeachment for “high Crimes and Misdemeanors” was warranted for
all sorts of noncriminal violations that were, in essence, fiduciary breaches.
Just as the Framers viewed the
presidency as fiduciary, they understood the offenses that might disqualify the
incumbent as breaches of that fiduciary duty. And that may well be why the
discussion of Morris’s suggestion was so brief—the drafters knew what the words
historically meant, because, as a House Judiciary Committee report noted in
1974, “at the time of the Constitutional Convention the phrase ‘high Crimes and
Misdemeanors’ had been in use for over 400 years in
impeachment proceedings in Parliament.” Certainly Alexander Hamilton knew by
the time he penned “Federalist No. 65,” in which he explained that
impeachment was for “those offenses which proceed from the misconduct of public
men, or, in other words, from the abuse or violation of some public trust.”
What constitutes such an abuse or
violation of trust is up to Congress to decide: First the House decides to
bring impeachment charges, and then the Senate decides whether to convict on
those charges. The process of impeachment by the House and removal by trial in
the Senate is thus, in some ways, akin to indictment by a grand jury and trial
by a petit jury. In other ways, it is quite different. As Laurence Tribe and
Joshua Matz explain in their recent book on impeachment, “the Constitution
explicitly states that Congress may not end a presidency unless the president
has committed an impeachable offense. But nowhere does the Constitution state
or otherwise imply that Congress must remove a president
whenever that standard is met … In other words, it allows Congress to exercise
judgment.” As Tribe and Matz argue, that judgment presents a “heavy burden,”
and demands that Congress be “context-sensitive,” and achieve “an understanding
of all relevant facts.” A president might breach his trust to the nation once
in some small, inconsequential way and never repeat the misbehavior, and
Congress could reasonably decide that the game is not worth the candle.
So the congressional judgment in the
impeachment process necessarily includes the number and seriousness of
offenses, and even extends well beyond those calculations. Congress must also,
in particular, weigh the chances of recidivism; that possibility is precisely
why the Constitution provides for removal as the principal sanction upon
conviction on impeachment charges. As Charles Black Jr. explained in his classic 1974 book on impeachment, “We remove him
principally because we fear he will do it again.” Or as George Mason put it
during the Constitutional Convention, “Shall the man who has practised
corruption … be suffered to escape punishment, by repeating his guilt?”
In short, now that the House of
Representatives has embarked on an impeachment inquiry, one of the most
important judgments it must make is whether any identified breaches of duty are
likely to be repeated. And if a Senate trial comes to pass, that issue would
become central as well to the decision to remove the president from office.
That’s when Trump’s behavioral and psychological characteristics
should—must—come into play. From the evidence, it appears that he simply can’t
stop himself from putting his own interests above the nation’s. Any serious
impeachment proceedings should consider not only the evidence and the substance
of all impeachable offenses, but also the psychological factors that may be
relevant to the motivations underlying those offenses. Congress should make
extensive use of experts—psychologists and psychiatrists. Is Trump so
narcissistic that he can’t help but use his office for his own personal ends?
Is he so sociopathic that he can’t be trusted to follow, let alone faithfully
execute, the law?
Congress should consider all this
because that’s what the question of impeachment demands. But there’s another
reason as well. The people have a right to know, and a need to see. Many people
have watched all of Trump’s behavior, and they’ve drawn the obvious conclusion.
They know something’s wrong, just as football fans knew that the downed
quarterback had shattered his leg. Others have changed the channel, or looked
away, or chosen to deny what they’ve seen. But if Congress does its job and
presents the evidence, those who are in denial won’t be able to ignore the
problem any longer. Not only because of the evidence itself, but because Donald
Trump will respond in pathological ways—and in doing so, he’ll prove the points
against him in ways almost no one will be able to ignore.
About the Author
George T. Conway III is
an attorney and a contributing writer at The Atlantic.
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