What Trump Should Learn From the Impeachment of Justice Samuel Chase
Trump wants to purge the federal bench of judges who disagree with him. Thomas Jefferson did too, and it didn't work out.

The first federal official of any kind to be impeached and removed from office was a federal judge from New Hampshire named John Pickering. He was an appointee of President George Washington and was generally aligned politically with the Federalists. After Thomas Jefferson was elected president in 1800, the Jeffersonians went on the attack against what they saw as untoward Federalist influence over the federal courts.
Pickering was vulnerable. He had faced credible past accusations of both mental instability and drunkenness. Did they count as "Treason, Bribery, or other high Crimes and Misdemeanors," which is what Article II, Section 4 of the Constitution requires for a judge to be "removed from Office"? Or perhaps he had run afoul of Article III, Section 1, which states that "the Judges, both of the supreme and inferior Courts, shall hold their Offices during good Behavior." Either way, a majority of Congress wanted him out and the requisite two-thirds majority was present in the Senate to do it. Pickering got the boot in 1803.
That set the stage for the real showdown over the power to impeach judges. Emboldened by the successful removal of Pickering, the Jeffersonians turned their glare on Supreme Court Justice Samuel Chase. An outspoken Federalist, Chase especially drew the ire of the Jeffersonians because of his role as the presiding trial judge in several Sedition Act prosecutions carried out by the Federalist administration of President John Adams.
Among those prosecutions was the 1800 trial of a bombastic political writer named James Callender. An ally of the Jeffersonians (in fact, Callender was partially bankrolled by Jefferson himself), Callender had published a scathing attack on both the Federalists in general and Adams in particular, describing Adams as "mentally deranged" and a "hideous hermaphroditical character, which has neither the force of a man, nor the gentleness and sensibility of a woman." That bit of election-year mudslinging landed Callender behind bars under the censorial terms of the Sedition Act, which the Adams administration happily enforced against him. Later, after Jefferson had defeated Adams to become president, Callender was pardoned by Jefferson.
The articles of impeachment filed against Chase in 1804 mixed legal complaints with political ones. One of them described Chase's conduct as the presiding judge in Callender's trial as being motivated by a "spirit of persecution and injustice," as well as an "intent to oppress, and procure the conviction of, the said Callender." Another article of impeachment charged Chase with conduct "highly indecent, extra-judicial, and tending to prostitute the high judicial character with which he was invested, to the low purpose of an electioneering partizan."
But two-thirds of the Senate did not buy it. Or perhaps it would be more accurate to say that enough senators, including a sufficient number of Jeffersonians, recognized the dangerous precedent that they would be setting if they removed a sitting member of the Supreme Court over what appeared to be mostly political disagreements. So Chase kept his job. He has remained the only Supreme Court justice ever to be impeached.
The Chase affair offers certain lessons for our own politically fraught times. Much like Jefferson, for example, President Donald Trump clearly likes the idea of purging the federal bench of judges who disagree with him. But Trump may find out, just as Jefferson did, that even some of his own allies lack the stomach for waging such an unsavory attack on the independence of the judiciary. After all, if the Republicans under Trump actually succeeded in impeaching and removing a federal judge for political reasons, the Democrats will undoubtedly repay them in kind at the first opportunity. It will be a race to the bottom that does lasting—and perhaps even irreparable—damage to the judicial branch.
In a way, this is all quite similar to the fate of Franklin Roosevelt's notorious court-packing plan of 1937. Roosevelt's scheme for undermining the independence of the judiciary failed in large part because members of Roosevelt's own party worked against it. Will any members of Trump's party do the same if the impeachment threats ever go beyond the talking point stage?
Currently, that question is moot because the Republicans lack the requisite two-thirds majority of votes in the Senate needed to remove anybody via impeachment. Time will tell if that unforgiving math alone is enough to prevent Trump from following any further in Jefferson's missteps.
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Did Chase carry the water for illegal alien rapists and murderers? Or was that Chase also gay?
Wait what?!!!!! Chase is gay?
Does Sarc know?
a "hideous hermaphroditical character, which has neither the force of a man, nor the gentleness and sensibility of a woman."
Sounds like Callender would not have agreed with Trump's executive order about there being only two sexes.
Callender gurl is dead
Jazzy Crockett?
The Chase affair offers certain lessons for our own politically fraught times.
That lesson being we are not in fact in fraught times, but standard times. That our political forefathers did the same and yet the Republic stands. And that the peoples duly elected representatives will pass judgement on court official's work and come to a political consensus of whether said judge is removed or not. This is by design, not a bug. Unlike "stable" totalitarian regimes that paper over this type of fighting with brutal repression, we duke it out - metaphorically mostly - which leads to a stronger healthier country.
Exactly right.
"Fraught" is the word until those with the power of removal choose the path of moderation. Until then, while tempers flare, a misstep could well do permanent damage to the Republic. If moderation and clear thinking prevails, then this will be one more good example of the strength of the structure we were given.
A big difference here is that Trump would have been on the side for, not against, the Alien and Sedition Acts.
Which side attempted to censor information and opinions, Sarc?
You didn't read the article, did you? He's attacking Jefferson for pardoning the convicted newspaper man and impeaching the judge who approved an unconstitutional law.
No wonder you're confused and don't know which way to respond.
Sarcbot is broken.
You must have read a different article.
The one I read didn't attack Jefferson, and wasn't a commentary about the constitutionality of any laws. Instead it was a story about going after judges for disagreeing with the administration, how it went down, and what might be learned from it.
Which article did you read? Got a link?
Twice in one short section.
You apparently think the Sedition Act was constitutional for letting the government throw newspaper editors and publishers in jail for insulting the President.
You apparently agree Jefferson was wrong to want to impeach a judge who approved of, and enforced, unconstitutional laws.
Do you think Trump would have been for or against the Alien and Sedition Acts?
Judging by his actions I believe that he'd be wielding those laws like weapons if they were available to him, and going after judges who tried to stop him.
And judging by our actions I believe you'd be defending him and coming up with some way to rationalize the Acts as constitutional.
Maybe for the Alien part, clearly not the Sedition part as he has yet to do more than bitch about the media (justifiably so).
Dude, he's disappearing foreign college students for being pro-Palestine with a law that was passed to round up citizens of enemy nations in a time of war, and he sued CBS for editing an interview in a way that he didn't like.
You don't think he'd be swinging the Alien and Sedition Acts around like a big hammer if they were available to him, and move to impeach any judge who stood in his way?
Oh, please.
Hence the Alien part. I really don’t think he would be throwing that particular hammer at citizens (I’m sure you think that’s naive, but there it is.)
Also, those fuckers did a bit more than be “Pro-Palestine”.
He’s using every emergency power on the books. If one lets him strip citizens of their rights, he’ll find a way to use it.
Call the people he is disappearing whatever you want. Just don’t call them a threat to our society or government and expect me to keep a straight face.
There you go again, ducking and dodging and weaving. Instead of addressing my response which proved your response was wrong, you pivot to a different question.
What a man!
No, you’re lying like Jesse and claiming the point of the article was that the Alien and Sedition Acts were wonderful and should not have been challenged, and because of that that Jefferson was wrong to go after judges. You’re also lying like Jesse and claiming Trump is a champion for the Constitution and his attacks on judges are noble. In truth you’re completely full of shit.
You are desperately flailing around with attacks in a desperate effort to defend Trump. Like Jesse on economics. And you’re completely ignoring the point of the article which was that if history is a guide, Trump’s attacks on judges probably won’t go his way. That was it. There was no hidden message.
Sarcbot drunk at 3pm. Poor sarcbot.
He wakes up drunk.
“…had published a scathing attack on both the Federalists in general and Adams in particular, describing Adams as "mentally deranged" and a "hideous hermaphroditical character, which has neither the force of a man, nor the gentleness and sensibility of a woman."…”
Anybody that talks about how we need to return to norms and decency should be soundly mocked. My god the founding fathers went hard.
“The Chase affair offers certain lessons for our own politically fraught times.”
Yeah, that there is nothing new under the sun and We The People can fucking survive.
“In a way, this is all quite similar to the fate of Franklin Roosevelt's notorious court-packing plan of 1937.”
Except it’s not. These judges are getting smacked down by the 9th District of all places. That should tell you that the judges are acting as political animals, not reasoned legal scholars. Juxtaposed with FDR (and democrats today) wanting to pack the court because the SC Justices dared to tell them that their policies were unconstitutional. Now, when Trump and Republicans do this after losing a case at the SC, then it’ll be similar.
+1
I wonder how the writer knew what a man or a woman was. Was he a biologist?
Don't you mean was they a biologist, bigot?
We was biologist and sheeet!
This one sided analysis ignoring the courts is another fun, but consistent, development.
Reason doesn't seem to care these courts are demanding dispersement of tax dollars. Yet reason pretends to want to cut spending. They dont care the courts are taking on regulations for the DoD. They don't care the courts are taking on hiring decisions.
Reason has become almost as dishonest as Lying Jeffy.
the bias is getting unbelievable I believe it may be a result of Soros/Koch nestling together
DON'T FIGHT IT, TRUMP!!!
SOROS JUDGES ARE THE REAL PRESIDENT NOW!!!
Viva (D)emocracy!
Trump seems to be quite the fan of Andrew Jackson.
Im sure that isn’t relevant though. Keep on coping Reason.
I'd send cookies if I heard "let's see him enforce it"
Why do libertarians accept as undisputed dogma that federal district court judges should not only enjoy absolute immunity but some sort of deification? I've had occasion to interact with the federal judiciary and I've read a fair number of their proclamations and I will state without reservation that they, as a group, are by far the most arrogant and dangerous government actors in the Republic. If Root gets his way none of them will ever pay any price for any crime against liberty that they commit. Not satisfied with absolute immunity Damon would immunize these thugs from impeachment, will of the governed be damned. Just fuck off. Reason libertarians have become full on radical statists and the more authoritarian the better.
Ah yes, the blatantly unconstitutional Sedition Act, signed by John Adams a mere 7 years after the First Amendment was ratified. And you're defending the judge who thought it was just hunky dory to throw newspaper editors and publishers in jail for daring to insult the President.
By all means, keep a craven political hack on the bench instead of holding him accountable for upholding an unconstitutional law. Wouldn't want to set a precedent that upholding an unconstitutional law was bad for future job prospects, would we?
And here Trump is, attacking media outlets who are more insulting, and you're attacking him for doing the exact same thing as Adams, except, no, he isn't trying to throw them in jail, is he?
What exactly is the point of this article?
* To defend freedom of the press for insults and lies?
* To defend judges who convict the press for insults and lies?
* To attack one President who pardoned the unconstitutionally criminally convicted newspaper man?
* To attack one President who wants millions of dollars for lies and insults?
What a hot mess.
Okay, but the logic is off
Jefferson was flaming liberal and had already tainted himself with the Kentucky Resollutions (state nullification) and he was a lawyer and Trump is not. Plus the difference in Cabinet delegation is enormous . Trump is gung-ho technological and Jerreson the opposite. Jefferson wanted a nation of yeomen farmers
Watch , Trump will win because he is older and not a lifelong fool politician like Biden, he has a death grip Cabinet, and he was already mistreated gravely by the people you think will come in on a white horse.
What President Trump does today, President Ocasio-Cortez can do in the future.
chance worth the laughable odds.
Yeah but Jefferson was a Democrat. Every Republican is taught since madel and jugend evangelical camp that Gott Mit Huns!
Wow, did you take the wrong road on this one.
Former AG Bill Barr is reported this morning with this quote, utterly opposed to you
""Even where it's appropriate for the court to play its traditional role of safeguarding the liberties of American citizens, we have this phenomena of nation-wide injunctions where the lowest level judge, district judges, try to bind the entire nation and bind the president in their initial decision. That is not what we have meant by the judicial power under our Constitution," "
It's almost as if there's consequences to using the judicial branch to try and imprison your political opponents: if it doesn't work and those opponents gain power, the likelihood they'll seek payback is about 100%. If the Democrats make the judiciary their main political weapon, Republicans using their current power to hamstring the judiciary is hardly surprising.
If you don't like the current rules of combat, it's probably worth considering the ways in which you contributed to the current state of affairs.
“ Democrats will undoubtedly repay them in kind at the first opportunity. It will be a race to the bottom that does lasting—and perhaps even irreparable—damage to the judicial branch.”
Hmmm, well maybe QUIT PRACTICING LAWFARE FROM THE BENCH.
Fucking partisans. Smh
Every day it gets more embarassing for REASON to defend Judge Boasberg as a model of judicial integrity
James Boasberg’s daughter works for nonprofit whose founder said judge ‘rightly’ blocked deportations of alleged Venezuelan gangbangers — and opposes Laken Riley Act
OUCH !!!!
Difference being "good Behavior".
Trump wants to impeach treasonous justices who don't even try to interpret the Supreme Law of the Land.
FDR wanted to impeach patriotic justices who applied the Supreme Law of the Land.
It all comes down to what the USA is.....
- A 'democratic' [Na]tional So[zi]alist Empire.
or
- A *Constitutional* Republic Union of States.