The Volokh Conspiracy
Mostly law professors | Sometimes contrarian | Often libertarian | Always independent
Donald Trump Promising a Position to RFK Jr. Isn't Illegal
Criminalizing such promises would violate the First Amendment
As Newsweek discussed in an article entitled "Donald Trump Accused of New Federal Crime as He Cozies Up to RFK Jr.," some people have claimed that Donald Trump promising a position to Robert Kennedy, Jr. is a federal crime. Trump offering a position to Kennedy may be a bad idea, but it is not illegal. Mitu Gulati and I pointed out in an article ("Mr. Presidential Candidate: Whom Would You Nominate?") that the relevant statute is ambiguous and, more importantly, applying the statute to a public promise of a position would run afoul of the First Amendment.
The statute, 18 U.S.C. § 599, provides in relevant part:
Whoever, being a candidate, directly or indirectly promises or pledges the appointment, or the use of his influence or support for the appointment of any person to any public or private position or employment, for the purpose of procuring support in his candidacy shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than one year, or both.
As we note in our article, there is a textual ambiguity in the statute: the trigger for the statute is "procuring support in his candidacy." Is this trigger procuring support from the public for his candidacy or instead procuring support from the potential nominee (or perhaps the potential nominee's associates) for his candidacy?
Picking up the argument from there, below is the relevant portion of our article (sans footnotes; if you want to read it with the footnotes, click here):
We do not dwell on these arguments regarding statutory interpretation because any attempt at applying this statute to a candidate's promises would violate the First Amendment. In Brown v. Hartlage, the United States Supreme Court confronted a state statute very similar to § 599. A candidate for county commissioner had promised to lower commissioners' salaries if elected, and the Kentucky Court of Appeals found that this violated the following state statute:
[W]hen a candidate offers to discharge the duties of an elective office for less than the salary fixed by law, a salary which must be paid by taxation, he offers to reduce pro tanto the amount of taxes each individual taxpayer must pay, and thus makes an offer to the voter of pecuniary gain.
The Supreme Court reversed, unanimously. The Court treated this regulation of candidates' speech as subject to strict scrutiny (one in a long line of cases so finding), and it invalidated this statute because it failed the first prong of a strict scrutiny inquiry: the identification of a compelling state interest. The Court noted that there was a plausible claim that a promise to accept a lower salary would reduce voters' taxes, but it found that the state's interest in preventing vote-buying was not implicated because "Brown did not offer some private payment or donation in exchange for voter support; Brown's statement can only be construed as an expression of his intention to exercise public power in a manner that he believed might be acceptable to some class of citizens." As the Court emphatically stated:
Candidate commitments enhance the accountability of government officials to the people whom they represent, and assist the voters in predicting the effect of their vote. The fact that some voters may find their self-interest reflected in a candidate's commitment does not place that commitment beyond the reach of the First Amendment. We have never insisted that the franchise be exercised without taint of individual benefit; indeed, our tradition of political pluralism is partly predicated on the expectation that voters will pursue their individual good through the political process, and that the summation of these individual pursuits will further the collective welfare. So long as the hoped-for personal benefit is to be achieved through the normal processes of government, and not through some private arrangement, it has always been, and remains, a reputable basis upon which to cast one's ballot.
In Hartlage, there was at least a plausible interest that the state could articulate (avoiding vote-buying), even though it was unpersuasive. It is difficult to see any legitimate—much less compelling—interest that the government would have in preventing corruption via prohibiting the naming of cabinet or Supreme Court nominees. Put differently, it is hard to fathom what the state's interest would be. In Hartlage, there was a benefit to voters in the form of reduced taxes, but here there is no benefit to voters other than the likely nomination of appointees whom they would like to see in positions of power—and there is no conceivable state interest in preventing that from happening.
The government might have an interest in prohibiting concealed promises from candidates to potential nominees. Secret promises give no information to voters, so their only benefit is a private one to the candidate and/or to the nominee. That underscores the implausibility of any government interest in preventing the public naming of nominees in advance. There is no corrupting element.
A different way to come at this question is to consider why the First Amendment is treated as placing a high value on electioneering speech. One reason is because an active and full debate among candidates helps voters make more informed choices. The voters are the customers choosing among products in the marketplace of ideas. Reading the statute to prohibit the public disclosure of prospective nominees results in the implicit (and sometimes explicit) bargains between presidential candidates and prospective nominees being pushed underground. And that in turn prevents voters from being able to evaluate the competing bargains that the different candidates have struck—the opposite of what First Amendment values push toward. In effect, this occurred with Earl Warren's appointment to the Supreme Court in 1953. Dwight Eisenhower reportedly promised Earl Warren that he would be appointed to the Court as soon as a seat opened up. The public, though, had no way of factoring this promise into their decision as to whether to vote for Eisenhower.
It is simply impossible to imagine any compelling interest for the application of § 599 to our proposal, much less a compelling interest to which application of § 599 would be narrowly tailored. And it bears noting that in the years since Hartlage, the Court has, if anything, raised the First Amendment bar for regulations on campaign speech. For example, the Court has held that a prohibition on candidates for judicial office "'announc[ing] his or her views on disputed legal or political issues'" violates the First Amendment, despite the obvious state interest in avoiding the appearance of impartiality. The bottom line, then, is that application of § 599 to our proposal would run afoul of the First Amendment.
Editor's Note: We invite comments and request that they be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of Reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Things that have never been crimes become crimes when Trump does them. This is primarily due to TDS and incessant mind-reading on the part of elected Democrats.
The TDS afflicted remind me of the spoiled child who when they lose a game kick over the table and accuse the winner of cheating followed by falling to the ground and throwing an absolute fit.
Um, there is exactly one candidate who calls elections rigged and unfair every time he loses. You are right that this reflects TDS, though.
The fictitious condition known as TDS was invented by Trump supporters to immunize him from criticism; whenever someone criticizes him, or prosecutes him for crime, he can simply hand waive that that's just TDS.
Well, no, it isn't. He really did commit crimes, and if he weren't a former POTUS he'd already be in jail. The special treatment he's received from the legal system is mostly far more favorable than any run of the mill John Q. Defendant would have gotten. "Oh that's just TDS" convinces no one except the already converted.
This is a guy whose professional career has mostly consisted of one fraud after another that mostly flew under the radar. He apparently didn't appreciate that when you run for POTUS you get more intense scrutiny, and if you've got anything lurking in your past, it will be found.
Yes, this statute enacted in 1948 was passed expressly to get Trump.
Just curious. Has 18 U.S.C. § 599 ever been applied to any democratic party candidate for the presidency?
"Crimes that no one ever considered committing suddenly become relevant again when Trump allegedly commits them."
FIFY
This is such a bizarrely bad take that I had assumed it was a Calabresi special before scrolling back up. The statute doesn't regulate speech at all, except incidentally. It regulates an agreement to trade a government position¹ for an endorsement. That agreements use words does not mean that regulating agreements is the same thing as regulating speech. And while a public announcement of such an agreement would violate the statute, so would an entirely private agreement.
¹To be sure, the statute says that it would also be illegal to make such an agreement for a private job, and that may be harder to justify.
I had the same confusion. Stuart's entire argument is that Trump's promising to the public that he will appoint Kennedy to an important Cabinet post is protected by the First Amendment. But that is not what people are alleging is the problem. They are alleging that Kennedy offered to endorse Trump, if Trump would agree to appoint him to such a post, which is the kind of "private promise" that Stuart acknowledges may have limited public value.
Making such a promise privately and then publicly announcing it should not change the analysis. Just trickier to untangle and prove.
SimonP : “They are alleging that Kennedy offered to endorse Trump, if Trump would agree to appoint him to such a post…..”
Left unsaid is this : Whether Trump’s conduct is illegal per a 1948 law or not, it reeks of sleaze. All the vociferous whining from the cult doesn’t change that. In fact, I bet they whine all the more frantically as distraction from Trump’s swamp-like behavoir.
And it also doesn’t change this : RFK JR. offered to sell himself to Harris first. This he has freely & publicly admited. But she wouldn’t touch his deal with a ten-foot pole. The idea of promising an important government post to such a wack-job loon was clearly beyond the pale.
Because, like it or not, these two candidates are a world-apart when it comes to ethics and civic responsibility. Just like you’d expect from a lifelong criminal vs former prosecutor.
Do you have a cite for where he freely and publicly admitted this? All I see are several articles a day or two after the initial WaPo hit piece where he categorically denied it.
"CNN
—
Independent presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s campaign reached out to Vice President Kamala Harris’ campaign to arrange a meeting about a possible role in her administration if he drops out of the race and endorses her, a Kennedy campaign official and a Democratic official told CNN.
The approach from Kennedy’s team occurred last week, and no meeting between the two candidates materialized, the Kennedy campaign official told CNN."
https://www.cnn.com/2024/08/14/politics/rfk-jr-harris-administration-role/index.html
Sorry, Charlie, but where does that say RFK Jr. admitted anything?
It's not better if his campaign is going around making stuff up.
So take your pick, it's one or the other.
It could also be that CNN misunderstood or fabricated the original claim. But you've provided no support for the claim that, "RFK JR. offered to sell himself to Harris first. This he has freely & publicly admitted"
It's also in the Washington Post and NY Times.
And received no pushback from the Kennedy camp.
"Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s campaign reached out to Vice President Kamala Harris’ campaign to arrange a meeting about a possible role in her administration if he drops out of the race and endorses her"
is RFK Jr. offering to sell himself to Harris first.
You mean this kind of "no pushback"? The kind where RFK Jr. himself explicitly denied it?
Let me guess -- wrong rock.
Seriously. The analysis in the post is completely inapplicable to the facts that are being alleged and seem incredibly likely to have occurred, especially in light of the video that leaked a few weeks ago of the phone call between Trump and Kennedy.
So, is the statute unconstitutional, or can the writer give an example when it would apply?
Prof. Michael Dorf discusses the issue too:
https://www.dorfonlaw.org/2024/08/rfk-jr-is-out-did-trump-commit-another.html
No final judgment, but I usually find him sensible. BTW, he's a vegan, to cite something that came up on another thread. But, don't hold that against him.
Why shouldn't we hold it against him?
You, duck salad, and you alone, may hold it against him.
So using Democrat logic, he's as evil as Hiltler.
Having a hard time believing that the Kentucky Court of Appeals was serious when they ruled that promising to reduce taxes, on everyone in general, is illegal vote buying.
What were they thinking? Is there some backstory or context that makes it less outrageously stupid than it sounds?
It seems impossible for someone to promise to procure public support for a candidate without endorsing him. But this is the distinction which we are told makes the statute ambiguous.
Huh? The statute doesn't ban endorsements. It bans offering someone a job in exchange for an endorsement.
This is bad analysis. Nobody is talking about a public promise. They are talking about a private, backroom deal where Trump promised Kennedy an appointment in exchange for him dropping out of the race and endorsing Trump. Hartlage has no application to this set of facts.
This is certainly sleazy, possibly illegal.
And, just ask Trump’s opponents, this sort of thing is completely unprecedented and only Trump would stoop to it; other politicians are too pure to engage in logrolling or corrupt bargains.
Well, even if they did, they’d be less crude than Trump, making use of hints and understandings which everyone understands but which everyone can deny.