
President Biden went back on his word by pardoning his son Hunter Biden. His stated rationale for granting the pardon will inevitably muddy the political waters as President-elect Donald J. Trump prepares to take office with plans to use the Justice Department and the F.B.I. to pursue “retribution” against his political adversaries. Peter Baker, chief White House correspondent, discusses where Mr. Biden’s decision leaves the U.S. justice system.
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Michael Balbaro
From the New York Times, I'm Michael Balbaro. This is the Daily today, why President Biden went back on his word to pardon his own son and where that decision leaves the US System of justice. Chief White House correspondent Peter Baker is our guest. It's Tuesday, December 3rd. Peter, we are reaching you in of all places, Angola, where you are traveling with President Biden. It's pretty late there for you.
Peter Baker
Yeah, exactly. Yes. Air Force One just landed here in Luanda, the capital, and he got off the plane for the start of a couple day visit here. Didn't talk with the reporters on the plane or those on the ground about anything going on back home. But obviously that's top of mind for a lot of people.
Michael Balbaro
Right. It seems impossible to imagine that the subject of what he did before he left for Angola is not very much chasing him there.
Peter Baker
Yeah, exactly. I think it's one of these foreign trips that will be shattered now by a domestic issue that he dealt with literally just hours before getting on the plane, his decision to pardon his son, Hunter Biden.
Michael Balbaro
Well, Peter, I wonder if you can describe your reaction to that announcement because I think for a lot of us, for me at least, it was a real double take moment. Like, I'm sorry, what, what just happened? And I wonder what your reaction was as a close student of Joe Biden's for decades as chief White House reporter and as a really historically minded kind of thinker about the presidency.
Peter Baker
Well, it's a big deal for a president to use his power of clemency to protect his own son from the justice system. Right. This is something that hasn't happened before. There have been a couple occasions where presidents used the power of the pardon or commutation to help people who are close to them, even members of the family. Bill Clinton pardoned his brother Roger, who had had old drug charges. And President Donald Trump pardoned Jared Kushner's father from old tax evasion charges. But this is the first time we've seen a president use the power for his own son and to head off any punishment for that member of the family. Both the previous examples came after their sentences had been served and were basically meant as statements of forgiveness, not preventing accountability. In this case, President Biden is actually interceding before his son is even sentenced, saying, no way I'm letting him go to prison. And so in that moment, with the stroke of a pen, he has done something extraordinary by upending the judicial system that he has spent his career and particularly the last four years defending. And the pardon of his son now gives ammunition to Republicans, including Trump, to say that the justice system doesn't work. It is politicized. Why did they say that? Because now Joe Biden has said that. And I think that's a big, big moment for Joe Biden's legacy.
Michael Balbaro
We're gonna return, Peter, to the implications of all of this, the meaning of it, and how it's gonna fit into Biden's legacy. But I wonder if we can start with how Biden got to this place. Because pardoning his son, Hunter, fully and unconditionally is something that Biden said repeatedly that he would never, ever do. And I want to talk with you about why he said he would never do it and what you've come to understand about why Biden ultimately changed his mind.
Peter Baker
Right, Exactly. Well, Biden, of course, campaigns for office and comes to office after the 2020 election by accusing President Trump of politicizing the Justice Department, of making decisions about law enforcement subject to his political will, going after his enemies and favoring his friends. And he said he wasn't gonna do that. He was gonna restore the system of justice. But when he comes to office, he understands that his own son is already being investigated by a U.S. attorney in Delaware on a number of possible issues. And that U.S. attorney has been made into a special counsel, which is meant to insulate that prosecution from politics. And Biden makes a decision from the beginning, he's gonna keep that special counsel, or at least not gonna do anything to stop that special counsel from cont. And then Merrick Garland as attorney general, makes the decision to keep that same special counsel in place to demonstrate that they're not trying to influence this in any way, that the special prosecutor should have the right to pursue the facts as he chooses. So Biden was taking a hands off approach. That's what he said. He was gonna take a hands off approach.
Michael Balbaro
Right. And in that sense, he's really putting his money where his mouth was during this Period. Because he's saying to the world, you know, you certainly could understand why I might want to intercede on behalf of my son, but I refuse on principle.
Peter Baker
Exactly. He makes it a point of principle. He makes it a point of contrast with his predecessor and now successor, Donald Trump. And he uses this, in fact, to make the case that the Justice Department is, in fact, neutral and making politics free decisions when they go after Trump. Because his point is, hey, the Justice Department that is prosecuting Trump is also prosecuting my son. And I'm not having anything to do with either one of those things. This is just based on facts and law. That was the argument he was making.
Michael Balbaro
Right. Because to cast doubt on one of those investigations was to potentially cast doubt on all of them, which is why he's going to withhold judgment, steer clear of all this stuff.
Peter Baker
Exactly right. But parallel to all this, of course, is a separate track, which is a partisan investigation by the House Republicans who are going after Hunter on all kinds of sometimes unproven theories about all the different ways he might have abused his father's influence to make money. And so you have these two tracks going on. One, the professional prosecutors who end up charging Hunter Biden with gun charges and tax charges, and then the parallel House Republican investigation, which is seen certainly in the White House as just an effort to damage the president.
Michael Balbaro
But eventually, the official legal proceedings intensify, and Hunter Biden is charged and brought to trial.
Peter Baker
And he's found guilty by a jury of his peers of lying on a firearms application form. And then in a separate trial, he pleads guilty to tax evasion. And these are real charges, not brought by members of Congress, but by professional prosecutors with judges, and in one case, a jury that makes a finding. And so Hunter faces a sentence that could last up to 25 years in one case, though as a first time offender, he would likely expect a shorter sentence, possibly even just parole. As we sit here in Normandy, your son Hunter is on trial.
Michael Balbaro
And I know that you cannot speak about.
Peter Baker
We reporters are asking President Biden the obvious question. Will you accept the jury's outcome, their verdict, no matter what it is? Yes. And have you ruled out a pardon for your son? Yes.
Michael Balbaro
You have?
Peter Baker
Are you going to pardon your son? And he tells us no.
Michael Balbaro
Second one.
Peter Baker
Would the president pardon or commute his.
Michael Balbaro
Son if he's convicted?
Karine Jean-Pierre
So I've answered this question before. It was asked of me not to.
Peter Baker
And his press secretary, Karine Jean Pierre, says it again and again.
Karine Jean-Pierre
We've been asked that question multiple times. Our answer stands which is no.
Peter Baker
That question's been answered. Our answer is still the same. No, he will not intervene.
Karine Jean-Pierre
It's still a no. It will be a no. It is a no. And I don't have anything else to add. Will he pardon his son?
Peter Baker
No.
Michael Balbaro
Right. And they don't leave, we should say, any wiggle room whatsoever. They don't say, well, he's thinking about it and we'll get back to you. They emphatically say he's not gonna do this. And he's not gonna do this because it betrays his stated values and his expectations about how the system should work and the role that politics should or shouldn't play in the justice system.
Peter Baker
Exactly. In fact, President Biden at one point even says that he accepts the outcome of the first trial in which his son is convicted, and he respects the judicial process, which is a way of signaling to the world at large and specifically, in contrast to Donald Trump, that he believes in the system. He will not get involved himself. He will not upend what has been done there on behalf of his own family. But obviously, that's not the end of the story.
Michael Balbaro
And this is the part where I would normally ask you what changed specifically, but I think we can intuit that a big thing that changed was that Donald Trump won the presidency. Is that ultimately what seems to tip the scales here from the emphatic nose and the principled position of I will not muddy this system to I'm going to pardon my son?
Peter Baker
Yeah. I think obviously the only thing that's changed between June when he began saying that, and today December when he gives this pardon is the election. And you can look at it a couple of different ways. You can look at it in the way of him not being honest in the summer that he really was, in fact, considering this, but didn't want to say before an election because it would be politically damaging. And only after the election does he admit that in fact he is going to use his extraordinary power for his son. Or, and this may be an andor, you can also look at it as waking up to the reality of a Trump run Justice Department in which this new president is promising retribution and specifically to go after Hunter Biden and a president who's on the way out thinking, I'm not gonna let that happen. I'm not only gonna pardon him for this tax and gun charges, I'm gonna protect him from the next guy who's making very clear he's gonna use the FBI for retribution. And why would he think that? Well, he has only to look at who Trump has been naming to run the nation's law enforcement agencies. Pam Bondi, a former Florida attorney general he will nominate for attorney general. And Cash Patel, a former aide to him, will be confirmed by the Senate. The FBI director. Both of them are known as sharply partisan warriors who have subscribed to Trump's conspiracy theories, his election lies, and his taste for retribution against his enemies. And so you can tell Biden is protecting his son from Trump by the way he words it in the pardon. The pardon just said, well, we'll talk about that.
Michael Balbaro
Talk about the way the pardon is articulated, the ground it covers, and what that reveals.
Peter Baker
The pardon is rather extraordinary because it doesn't just say that we absolve Hunter Biden of the convictions for which he has already been found, but we absolve him of any crimes he may have committed on any kind of topic for 10 years, starting in 2014 until 2024. We haven't seen a pardon like that, as sweeping as that in decades, probably not since Watergate. And what it says is, in effect, that no matter what Trump and his Republican allies may come up with about Hunter, they can't prosecute him for that. And it's really a way of insulating Hunter not just from the convictions he' already facing, but from any future investigation by and what Biden would believe to be a politicized Trump administration. Justice Department.
Michael Balbaro
Right. It's like a flashing red light that says, don't even bother to investigate Hunter Biden, because this pardon means that the places you would look and the charges you might bring, I have just made it impossible for you to charge him for anything during that period.
Peter Baker
Absolutely. It's a 10 year get out of jail free card. Right. Anything he might have done wrong, including all the different suspicious things that Republicans think that they have been looking into about trading influence with businesses and so forth, none of that is prosecutable anymore.
Michael Balbaro
Well, what, if anything, does Biden say about his reasoning for why he issued such a sweeping pardon?
Peter Baker
On the one hand, he says, understandably, that this is the act of a father. Right. He says, I hope Americans will understand why a father and a president would come to this decision. Those were his words. And he. He's referring to the struggles that his son has had with addiction over the years. And that in his view, drug and alcohol addiction is really behind the crimes for which he was convicted, that lying on the firearms form and the tax evasion were all a symptom of this larger struggle that he has now, in theory, overcome. If he had left it at that. That might be one thing. I think a lot of people would have understood that even if they didn't think it was the right thing to do. But instead, he adds to that a very blistering attack on the prosecution against his son. He says that his son would never have been brought for felony charges if it hadn't been for his last name, that he's being singled out. He says, in fact, in the statement he puts out with the pardon that no reasonable person who looks at the facts of Hunter's cases can reach any other conclusion than Hunter was singled out only because he is my son.
Michael Balbaro
And this is not, to your earlier point, a blistering attack just on partisan Republican congressional investigations into his son. This is a pretty blistering attack, really, on his own Department of Justice and the lawyers and prosecutors within it who brought cases against his son.
Peter Baker
Right. He doesn't explicitly say the Justice Department is bad, the same way Trump does all the time, but he does say that raw politics, that's his phrase, raw politics has infected this process and it led to a miscarriage of justice. His words. How has it affected it? He doesn't exactly say, but obviously who would it affect would be his own Justice Department. That he's saying that his own Justice Department, through the special counsel, which does have some insulation from politics, in theory, has in fact been influenced by the Republicans who have been out there banging the drums about Hunter Biden and been tougher on his son, in effect, because of that. And what really struck me in reading this statement was how much it sounded like another president, Donald Trump, who's been saying a lot of the same things about a broken Justice Department infected by politics. And now suddenly that gives a whole new complexion to this debate about the role of justice in American society.
Michael Balbaro
We'll be right back.
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Karine Jean-Pierre
I'm Diana Wynn. I'm a producer on the Daily and I worked on an episode about how these really complicated global forces impact this one ranching family. I'm just Gonna. I'm recording now. I'm just gonna record everything. I've lived in one of the most rural pockets of Texas, and I always heard ranchers say it's super hard to make a living, but I didn't really get the economics of it at all. What kind of cows are these? In making this episode, I started to understand how decades of consolidation in this industry has made it tough for the people who produce our food. It's important to me that we were able to tell this story about rural America on the Daily. We have this amazing group of producers from all over the map who are bringing their own life experiences to the stories that we tell every day. But it takes a lot of resources, and we need your support to keep doing that work. You can help us make the Daily by subscribing to the New York Times. Thank you.
Michael Balbaro
Peter. In reflecting on what you said just before the break, it feels like what Biden is asking the country to do with this pardon is to accept the idea that the justice system made serious mistakes and was politicized in this one case involving its pursuit of his son, but that we shouldn't apply that same thinking to other cases that this Justice Department has taken up, including and perhaps above all, those brought against Trump.
Peter Baker
Right, Exactly. And that's the kind of situational judgment that is, of course, problematic, because either the justice system is something you have faith in, or it's a corrupted department at this point. And Trump and his allies very quickly seized on this pardon to say, see, we were right. Even Biden now says that the Justice Department can be infected by politics, can be used as a weapon against somebody, and it's been used against our guy, Donald Trump, in these other cases, which are far more serious, by the way, than anything Hunter Biden's been accused of. But that distinction gets lost. Right. It ends up becoming false equivalence, but one that's very useful politically.
Michael Balbaro
Right. And that's the risk that Biden, I think, quite consciously understood he was taking here, that he was going to be, to some degree, undermining people's faith in the system. But if you're Biden, there is kind of a reality. Right, Peter, That Trump and his appointees and his whole approach to the Justice Department does present a unique threat to Hunter Biden, and that I don't think many people doubt that Trump wanted to go after Hunter Biden said so. And if we've learned anything about Trump, it's to believe him when he says he's going to do something. So if you're Biden and you want to protect your son, is there a reality that you have to begin to operate on Trump's terms? And that's really what happened here?
Peter Baker
Yeah, I think that's a good way of putting it. He is operating in some ways on Trump's terms. He doesn't actually say that in the statement, which is interesting. Right. He talks about the current prosecutions that that his son has faced being unfair and selective. He doesn't say the other part, which you just rightly focused on, which is that he is guarding against politicization of the Justice Department by his successor.
Michael Balbaro
Right.
Peter Baker
He could have framed it that way, but he didn't. But the net effect of what he did by making it a ten year sweeping pardon for any and everything that his son might have done does have that effect. And it does tell you what was probably going through his mind when he decided to issue the pardon.
Michael Balbaro
And that makes me wonder, do you think that President Biden, and this is a difficult question, I'll just preface it by saying that would have issued this pardon if Trump had lost and his vice president, Kamala Harris had won the election, because that would have meant there was a much lower level of threat to Hunter Biden under a Kamala Harris, Department of Justice.
Peter Baker
Yeah, that's an excellent question and one that we didn't get an answer to when we asked the White House. But you're right to ask it because it does make you wonder how much of this is about saving him from the prison terms he might have under the guilty verdicts he already has versus looking ahead at what's in store. And it is possible that had the Democrats won, whether it had been him when he was running or Harris when she was running, that he wouldn't have felt compelled to do this. But we won't know and he hasn't.
Michael Balbaro
Said, Peter, you mentioned how Trump and his Republican allies are responding to this pardon. But I'm curious about how Democratic elected officials and operatives are feeling about this decision because you could see a world where some of them might welcome it, they might cheer it and say, finally, President Biden and Democrats, you are living in the kind of hand to hand combat world of Donald Trump. You're meeting him where he is, to use the phrase we just did a couple of minutes ago. You're meeting him on his terms. You could just as easily, however, see Democrats say, President Biden, you just stooped to Trump's level. You betrayed what you said you stood for and you've tarnished our entire political brand in the process. All to protect your son.
Peter Baker
Well, and Democrats being Democrats, they're saying both those things. Right. There are a number of Democrats out there who are saying, look, the president is right. His son was targeted because he was his son, that there's no way he would have gotten such harsh treatment had his name been Hunter Smith instead of Hunter Biden. You hear that most prominently, for instance, from Eric Holder, former Attorney General under President Obama. And there's some truth to that, according to experts we have interviewed in the past, saying that a lot of these cases like Hunter Biden's wouldn't have gone as far as his did. On the other hand, it's also worth pointing out that when Biden says his son is being prosecuted for his last name, he didn't have any complaints when his son was profiting in business using his last name. Right?
Michael Balbaro
Right.
Peter Baker
All the companies give him millions of dollars because his name was Hunter Biden, not Hunter Smith. So, you know, being the son of a president has its benefits and its drawbacks. And in this case, obviously, you can argue that it's had both of those things. But there are other Democrats, as you rightly point out, who are upset about this, who say, no, this is not a good thing. While it's totally understandable what a father might want to do, it undercuts the independence of the justice system, and it undercuts the debate against Trump's corruption of it. I talked to Senator Michael Bennett, a Democrat from Colorado, says, totally understands what a father must feel like in this, he said, but it's. And he quotes here another instance of putting his personal interests ahead of his responsibility to the country.
Michael Balbaro
Hmm. And when Senator Bennett says another instance, is he referring to the first instance being Biden staying in the race for president too long?
Peter Baker
Exactly. This pardon comes at a moment when Democrats are already pretty upset at Biden over the election result, blaming him more than Kamala Harris for losing to Donald Trump, believing that he put the Democrats in this position because he decided to run for reelection, even though everyone knew he was gonna be 86 by the end of a second term and therefore would be problematic, and that he himself knew that his own approval ratings were pretty low and didn't give a next generation a chance in a primary fashion to come up with a candidate, whether it be Kamala Harris or somebody else who would be tested and a proven commodity by the time it came to a general election against Donald Trump. So there's a lot consternation about President Biden among Democrats. This has stirred it even further, Peter.
Michael Balbaro
It strikes Me that the decision Biden made to stay in the presidential race as long as he did what Michael Bennett just referred to, and this decision to pardon his son Hunter, that they have some similarities, because in both cases, it feels to me, anyway, Biden had to choose between a personal desire and a pretty big principle. The principle in the campaign decision was, should I step down for the good of my party and the good of my country? In the decision around his son, it was, do I choose my son or do I choose the integrity of the system that I have defended for decades?
Peter Baker
Yeah. No, this is a Shakespearean quality to this story. Right. In both those instances. Look, presidents, by definition, are people with a certain degree of hubris. They believe inevitably in their own greatness. Otherwise, how can you look in the mirror and say, I am the person who should be president of this country more than any of the other 330 million people who live here? But it's also a very human story. It is the story of a president who had to make a decision between principle on the one hand, and defending a system, even if you thought it had mishandled the situation and allowing your son to go to prison. And there's a sense of guilt there. Right. Again, this is Shakespearean. He feels guilty. The hunter has been targeted. He feels guilty about all that has happened to his son over these last few years. That it isn't just Hunter's fault because of his addiction and because of his mistakes that led to convictions, that his life has been torn upside down, that he's been tortured in a public setting because of him, the president, and that he can make it right only by issuing this pardon.
Michael Balbaro
Peter, I just want to end on the very question of pardons. And I feel like I always return to a feeling of bewilderment that anyone has been endowed in our democratic system with this singular power. I had that feeling when Trump was pardoning Jared Kushner's father in law. I had that question when Bill Clinton was pardoning a relative of his. If I'm being honest, I have this question now. When Joe Biden is pardoning his son.
Peter Baker
Yeah. It is a kingly kind of power. Right. And the founders knew that when they wrote that into the Constitution. But they also viewed it as a check on a system that could go awry. Right. And they didn't necessarily envision it being a check on a system going awry against the president's own family. What they saw it as was a way to correct errors in the system against ordinary Americans who are every day subjected to the justice system and in some cases, unfairly treated. And that's why there is a pardon office in the Justice Department that sends recommendations to the president that has a process that tries, in fact, to correct the wrongs of the system. Because, of course, the system gets things wrong. Every system does at some point or another. But what happened here with Biden's pardon, and a lot of Trump's pardon for that matter, too, is that it didn't go through any process. And that raises a lot of questions. What is justice in America? Who says it's fair and not tainted? How do you take politics out of it? And we seem to be putting more politics into it with each passing day.
Michael Balbaro
Well, Peter, thank you very much.
Peter Baker
Thanks for having me.
Michael Balbaro
We'll be right back.
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Podcast Information:
In the December 3, 2024 episode of The Daily, hosts Michael Barbaro and Sabrina Tavernise delve into the unprecedented decision by President Joe Biden to pardon his son, Hunter Biden. This episode features an in-depth discussion with Chief White House Correspondent Peter Baker, examining the ramifications of this move on the U.S. justice system and President Biden's legacy.
Timestamp [00:30] - Michael Balbaro: Michael Barbaro introduces the episode by highlighting President Biden's unexpected decision to pardon his son, Hunter Biden, despite Biden's prior assurances that he would never do so.
Timestamp [01:19] - Peter Baker: Peter Baker explains the context of Biden's visit to Angola and notes that despite being abroad, the decision to pardon his son took precedence, overshadowing his international agenda.
Key Points:
Timestamp [02:23] - Peter Baker: Baker emphasizes the gravity of a president using clemency to shield a close family member, highlighting the potential undermining of the judicial system's integrity.
Timestamp [05:31] - Michael Balbaro: Balbaro points out that Biden's actions might erode public trust in the justice system, as it appears to contradict his previous stance on non-interference.
Key Points:
Timestamp [04:28] - Peter Baker: Baker outlines Biden's initial commitment to a hands-off approach regarding his son's legal issues, emphasizing his respect for the special counsel's role.
Timestamp [09:24] - Michael Balbaro: Balbaro suggests that Trump's presidency and its influence on the Justice Department may have influenced Biden's decision to pardon his son.
Key Points:
Timestamp [12:18] - Michael Balbaro: Balbaro discusses how the pardon serves as a deterrent against future investigations by Republican allies of Trump.
Timestamp [22:36] - Peter Baker: Baker highlights the mixed reactions within the Democratic Party, with some supporting Biden's protective stance and others criticizing it as undermining judicial independence.
Key Points:
Timestamp [11:27] - Peter Baker: Baker analyzes the unprecedented breadth of the pardon, which absolves Hunter Biden of any crimes committed over a decade, effectively preventing any future prosecutions within that timeframe.
Timestamp [12:35] - Peter Baker: He further explains that this sweeping pardon acts as a "10-year get out of jail free card," neutralizing all potential charges, including those related to alleged abuses of influence.
Key Points:
Timestamp [15:33] - Michael Balbaro: Balbaro reflects on how Biden's actions may inadvertently affirm Republican claims of a politicized justice system, thereby complicating public trust.
Timestamp [26:01] - Michael Balbaro: Balbaro questions the constitutional validity and democratic implications of a president holding unilateral pardon power, citing historical parallels.
Key Points:
The December 3, 2024 episode of The Daily presents a comprehensive exploration of President Biden's unprecedented decision to pardon his son, Hunter Biden. Through insightful analysis and expert commentary, the episode highlights the complex interplay between personal loyalty, political pressures, and the sanctity of the U.S. justice system. The ramifications of this decision extend beyond immediate legal protections for Hunter Biden, posing profound questions about the integrity of presidential power and the future of judicial impartiality in America.
Notable Quotes:
Disclaimer: This summary is based on a transcript provided by the user and intended for informational purposes. It reflects the discussions and viewpoints presented in the specified episode of The Daily by The New York Times.