Proposing an amendment to the Constitution of the United States limiting the pardon power of the President.
What this could mean for your district
This bill proposes a constitutional amendment to limit the President's pardon power, specifically prohibiting self-pardons and pardons for close associates or for offenses related to them. • Local residents may have varying opinions on the implications for presidential accountability. • Changes in the pardon power could influence public trust in government institutions. • Legal professionals in the district may see shifts in how they advise clients regarding potential presidential pardons. • The amendment could affect discussions around criminal justice reform and its perceived fairness. AI-generated from official bill summary; verify with bill text.
Bill details
Bill overview
A neutral overview based on official congressional sources.
Introduced in House
This joint resolution proposes a constitutional amendment limiting the pardon power of the President. The amendment prohibits the President from granting a pardon or reprieve to himself or herself, to relatives or members of the administration, to paid campaign employees, to a person or entity for an offense motivated by an interest of any of those people, or to a person or entity for an offense directed by or coordinated with the President. The amendment also invalidates pardons issued for a corrupt purpose.
Related votes
Roll calls that reference this bill in official data.
Primary sources
Official links to verify details. No interpretation.