February 14, 2026

Does Impeachment Need a Crime? Not According to the Framers of the Constitution

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Does Impeachment Need a Crime? Not According to the Framers of the Constitution

Does Impeachment Need a Crime? Not According to the Framers of the Constitution
Trump has employed the services of constitutional law expert Alan Dershowitz. / Mark Wilson/Getty Images

But The view that no crime occurred is at odds with the original intent of the impeachment clause.


Does Impeachment Need a Crime? Not According to the Framers of the Constitution

By Dr. Stefanie Lindquist
Foundation Professor of Law and Political Science
Arizona State University


Donald Trumpโ€™s legal and political defenders are all singing the same refrain: The president canโ€™t be impeached; he hasnโ€™t committed a crime.

Alan Dershowitz, the constitutional lawyer now representing Trump, said it during an appearance on CNN. Sen. Ted Cruz echoed it on Twitter, noting there was โ€œnot even a speeding ticket.โ€ And, of course, Trump himself has used the phrase โ€œno crimeโ€ repeatedly as he seeks to delegitimize the impeachment hearings.

But does the impeachment and conviction of a president require an actual criminal offense, as the presidentโ€™s counselors and supporters argue?

Democrats clearly donโ€™t think so. Jerrold Nadler, the Democratic chair of the House Judiciary Committee, lectured senators at the impeachment hearing on Jan. 23 that the Constitution made it clear that a crime was not necessary for the president to be impeached.

This question of constitutional interpretation is critical to experts such as me, since the two articles of impeachment now pending in the Senate allege actions โ€” including the abuse of power and the obstruction of Congress โ€” that do not themselves constitute a violation of any criminal law.

And even though the Government Accountability Office has concluded that the Presidentโ€™s withholding of aid to Ukraine was unlawful under the Impoundment Control Act, the presidentโ€™s actions do not give rise to criminal penalties.

Treason, a matter of dates

Itโ€™s important to understand what is not on the table.

Under the impeachment clause of the Constitution, a president may be removed from office โ€œon impeachment for, and conviction of, treason, bribery, or other high crimes and misdemeanors.โ€

Treason is a criminal offenses, defined in the Constitution as acts that โ€œconsist of levying warโ€ against the United States or giving โ€œaid and comfortโ€ to its enemies. The Supreme Court has held that it can take place only in wartime.

Under this definition, Trump did not commit treason. Treason is not a catch-all phrase for unpatriotic acts. It requires actions like those of Benedict Arnold, the American general who betrayed his country to fight for the British in the Revolutionary War.

Bribery, also a criminal offense, was not alleged in the pending articles of impeachment.

Framersโ€™ intent

That leaves us with โ€œother high crimes and misdemeanors.โ€

The Republican Party has long advocated for constitutional interpretation that relies on the original intent of the framers. So what did the framers mean by this lofty phrase, and what did they reject as impeachable offenses?

During the Constitutional Convention, George Mason moved that the impeachment clause follow the term โ€œbriberyโ€ with โ€œor maladministration.โ€

But James Madison objected on grounds that it was too broad and would subject a president to tenure only at the pleasure of the Senate. So the phrase was replaced by โ€œother high crimes and misdemeanors.โ€

The framers intended the phrase to convey a more serious connotation than simple incompetence or poor administration. In Federalist Paper No. 65, Hamilton made clear that impeachable acts must involve โ€œthe abuse or violation of some public trustโ€ and โ€œrelate chiefly to injuries done immediately to the society itself.โ€

Hamilton made no mention of the requirement that actual crimes be committed, nor as far as I know did any other framer suggest that actual crimes were mandatory for impeachment.

Examples of impeachable offenses cited by the framers provide further context. In response to concerns that the president could use his pardon powers to protect his own bad acts from detection, Madison responded: โ€œif the president be connected, in any suspicious manner, with any person, and there be grounds to believe he will shelter him, the House of Representatives can impeach him.โ€

Madison makes no reference to any crime. His concern here is the potential for the use of presidential power for personal or other inappropriate purposes.

Fellow framer James Iredell concluded that presidential acts to obscure or withhold information from Congress could also constitute a violation of the impeachment clause if Congress was induced to act based on the deception.

โ€˜Misdemeanorsโ€™ misinterpreted?

The framers understood that โ€œhigh crimes and misdemeanorsโ€ included acts that may not necessarily violate any criminal law, but do constitute a serious violation of the public trust.

It also has to be remembered that the word โ€œmisdemeanorsโ€ had a broader meaning at the time it was added to the impeachment clause. As law professor and historian Frank Bowman has pointed out, in the context of British law at the time โ€œmisdemeanorโ€ did not solely mean a less serious criminal offense. Rather, โ€œcrimes and misdemeanorsโ€ was used more colloquially to mean bad behavior.

Advocates for Trump say the current articles of impeachment do not meet the threshold as they do not allege criminal offenses. The framers would be surprised by this interpretation.

Originalism revisited

The articles allege that Trump abused his political power to serve his own ends, including his reelection, and that in so doing he undermined the nationโ€™s security policy in terms of its commitment to Ukraineโ€™s defense.

Whether or not the evidence supports this charge, an actual criminal offense is simply not a prerequisite for impeachment in this or any other case. The framers are clear on this point.

Interpreting โ€œhigh crimes and misdemeanorsโ€ to reflect the modern understanding of those terms as actual statutory offenses is inconsistent with the framersโ€™ original intent. Such an approach is also inconsistent with the broader theory of originalism, which relies on interpreting what the founders meant at the time of the Constitutionโ€™s writing. Indeed, the presidentโ€™s position on โ€œhigh crimes and misdemeanorsโ€ appears more consistent with the idea that the Constitution should be interpreted within a modern context as a โ€œlivingโ€ constitution โ€” an interpretative method much criticized by many in the GOP.


Originally published by The Conversation, 01.26.2020, under the terms of a Creative Commons Attribution/No derivatives license.