Thirty-five Democrats in the House have sent a letter to Attorney General Loretta Lynch urging her to appoint an independent Special Counsel because Donald Trump āhas repeatedly engaged in actions constituting unauthorized foreign policy in violation of the Logan Act.ā
Dating back to 1799, the law has resulted in a grand total of one indictment (during Thomas Jeffersonās presidency) and no conviction. But the Logan Act remains a convenient statute to brandish against disruptors of foreign-policy orthodoxies.
The Jan. 12 letter ā relying on an arcane and wobbly relic of a law ā is an example of opportunism that isnāt even opportune. Worse, itās an effort to spur Justice Department action that would establish a dangerous precedent.
When the letter charges that āin several cases Mr. Trumpās actions directly contravene and undermine official positions of the United States government,ā the complaint rings hollow. In our lifetimes, countless private citizens ā and quite a few members of Congress ā have sought to contravene and undermine official U.S. positions. Often that has been for the better.
The members of Congress who signed the letter should know that. Many are ostensibly aligned with the kind of dissent that has been ā and will be ā essential to pull this country away from disastrous wars overseas. More than half of the letterās signers ā 19 of the 35 ā are in the Congressional Progressive Caucus.
It should be obvious that the Logan Act is antithetical to free speech and other vital liberties. The law provides for up to three years in prison for āany citizen of the United Statesā who ā without authorization from the U.S. government ā ādirectly or indirectly commences or carries on any correspondence or intercourse with any foreign government,ā with intent to influence that government āin relation to disputes or controversies with the United States.ā
Steve Vladeck, a professor of law at the University of Texas, points out that the First and Fifth Amendments ādo not look too kindly on either content-based restrictions on speech (which the Logan Act clearly is), or criminal laws that do not clearly articulate the line between lawful and unlawful conduct (which the Logan Act may well not do).ā
In recent decades, the specter of the Logan Act has been used to threaten legislators who went outside an administrationās policy boundaries. In 1975, Sens. George McGovern and John Sparkman faced accusations that theyād violated the Act by going to Havana and talking with Cuban officials. In 1984, President Ronald Reagan said that Jesse Jacksonās efforts in Cuba and Nicaragua may have violated the Logan Act.
Later in the 1980s, Reaganās National Security Council considered invoking the Logan Act to stop House Speaker Jim Wrightās involvement in negotiations between the Sandinista government and the Contra forces that the CIA made possible in Nicaragua. Twenty years later, in 2007, another House speaker ā Nancy Pelosi ā faced accusations that sheād run afoul of the Logan Act by going to Damascus and negotiating with Syriaās President Bashar al-Assad.
Now, itās sad to see dozens of Democrats trying to throw the Logan Act at Trump when there are so many crucial matters to address ā healthcare, civil rights, environmental protection, social programs and much more. While a multitude of legitimate and profound issues are at hand ā with an urgent need to concentrate on blocking the GOPās legislative agenda ā the letter clamoring for a Logan Act investigation of Trump is an instance of counterproductive partisan zeal run amuck.
The idea that a U.S. citizen ā whether Donald Trump, Jesse Jackson or anyone else ā does not have a right to dialogue with officials of foreign governments is pernicious and undemocratic. We should assert that right, no matter who is in the Oval Office.
While some members of Congress are indignant that Trumpās actions ādirectly contravene and undermine official positions of the United States government,ā the history of U.S. foreign policy warns against automatic deference to official U.S. positions. Citizens have often been wise when they sought to contravene and undermine the U.S. governmentās positions.
Today, entrenched forces in Washington remain committed to foreign policies more in line with what Martin Luther King Jr. called āthe madness of militarismā than the statecraft of real diplomacy. Citizens should push back against officials at either end of Pennsylvania Avenue who cite the Logan Act as an argument for conformity or use it as a tool for intimidation.
Norman Solomon is co-founder of the online activist group RootsAction.org, which has 750,000 members. He is executive director of the Institute for Public Accuracy.
ZNetwork is funded solely through the generosity of its readers.
Donate