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News / Nation & World

Democrats think Trump violated the Logan Act. What is it?

Law aims to keep citizens out of foreign affairs

By Amber Phillips, The Washington Post
Published: July 29, 2016, 6:01am

When Donald Trump asked Russian hackers to spy on Hillary Clinton on Wednesday, he shocked the nation. But did he break the law?

Some Democrats think so. Specifically, they’re accusing Trump of violating the Logan Act, a centuries-old law aimed at keeping private citizens out of foreign affairs.

If he did, it’d be a first. The Logan Act has been around since 1798, and no one has ever been found guilty of violating it. It seems its main purpose these past 200 years has been as a political weapon for the opposition party to cast doubt on the other party’s foreign policies.

Indeed, it often pops up in history when a politician does something with or relating to a foreign state that the other party deems controversial or unfair. Like now! So let’s break down the Logan Act.

• Here’s what it says, in layman’s terms: That a citizen of the United States should not conduct U.S. foreign affairs without the permission of the U.S. government.

• Here’s the full legalese:

“Any citizen of the United States, wherever he may be, who, without authority of the United States, directly or indirectly commences or carries on any correspondence or intercourse with any foreign government or any officer or agent thereof, with intent to influence the measures or conduct of any foreign government or of any officer or agent thereof, in relation to any disputes or controversies with the United States, or to defeat the measures of the United States, shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than three years, or both.

“This section shall not abridge the right of a citizen to apply, himself or his agent, to any foreign government or the agents thereof for redress of any injury which he may have sustained from such government or any of its agents or subjects.”

• Here’s its origin: It was named after George Logan, a state legislator from Pennsylvania who, in 1798, traveled to France to try to negotiate peace between the U.S. and France. (The two countries started fighting about whether the U.S. owed France its debts in the midst of the French Revolution. It was called the Quasi-War.)

Apparently the ruling Federalist Party was not happy about Logan trying to end said Quasi-War. When Logan returned him, he found the party had passed a law under his name forbidding any private citizen from conducting foreign affairs without the expressed permission of the government.

• Interesting postscript: Despite having a federal law made specifically to rebuke him, Logan went on to serve in the U.S. Senate for six years.

• Has anyone ever violated the Logan Act? A better way to ask that question might be: Has anyone been found guilty of violating the Logan Act? The answer to that is no. Plenty of people have been accused of violating it, but not a single person in the law’s 200-plus year history has gone to jail.

That’s partly because the law is vague about which branch of government can give permission for someone to conduct foreign affairs, noted Eugene Volokh in a Washington Post blog in 2015.

It could be the executive branch, it could be Congress. It could even be the president telling just one member of Congress to go do something without telling the others. It seems like are so many loopholes and uncertainties, it’s hard for prosecutors to peg down how someone violated this law — and even harder for courts to make that determination.

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