Joe Biden made the shock announcement Sunday night that he would issue a presidential pardon for his troubled son Hunter, calling his prosecution ‘selective’ and ‘unfair.’
The bombshell U-turn decision comes just weeks after The White House denied the president would make the drastic move in the final months of his lame duck presidency. Biden, himself, said as recently as June that he would ‘not pardon’ his son.
‘From the day I took office, I said I would not interfere with the Justice Department’s decision-making, and I kept my word even as I have watched my son being selectively, and unfairly, prosecuted,’ Biden said in a statement.
The president claimed that people are ‘almost never brought to trial on felony charges solely for how they filled out a gun form.’
He then added: ‘It is clear that Hunter was treated differently.’
Biden raged against ‘several of my political opponents in Congress‘ who he claimed made the charges a public spectacle ‘to attack me and oppose my election.’
He added that had the plea deal Hunter agreed to with the Department of Justice not fallen through, the president would have seen it as a ‘fair, reasonable resolution of Hunter’s cases.’
‘No reasonable person who looks at the facts of Hunter’s cases can reach any other conclusion than Hunter was singled out only because is my son – and that is wrong,’ he continued.
Joe Biden will announce a presidential pardon for his troubled son Hunter on Sunday night, a senior White House official has said
Biden says that there has been an effort to ‘break Hunter’ and destroy what he says is five-and-a-half years of sobriety.
‘In trying to break Hunter, they’ve tried to break me – and there’s no reason to believe it will stop here. Enough is enough.’
The president didn’t shy away from pointing out that the love of his son guided his decision-making but stressed that he was being ‘fair-minded.’
‘Here’s the truth: I believe in the justice system, but as I have wrestled with this, I also believe raw politics has infected this process and it led to a miscarriage of justice – and once I made this decision this weekend, there was no sense in delaying it further.’
Hunter was last season on holiday with his father and the rest of the Bidens on Nantucket in Rhode Island.
‘I hope Americans will understand why a father and a President would come to this decision.’
For months, the nation wondered if the president would pardon his ne’er-do-well son over his convictions on federal gun and tax fraud charges.
The pardon will cover both the gun charges and Hunter’s guilty plea.
Hunter was last season on holiday with his father and the rest of the Bidens on Nantucket in Rhode Island
It goes against what Biden has said as recently is June, directly telling the press: ‘I will not pardon him’
Biden was scheduled to be sentenced in the Delaware gun case on December 13, and on December 16 in the California tax case.
His father and even Donald Trump have been pestered on the issue, with Trump suggesting it wasn’t out of the question despite having railed against the First Son for years.
Abbe Lowell, a key member of 54-year-old Hunter’s legal team had begun making his client’s case to the press that he was a political prisoner.
‘This is a seven-year saga propelled by an unrelenting political desire to use a son to hurt his father,’ Lowell said.
Other presidents have issued controversial pardons – usually in the final days of their presidency.
In 1974, President Gerald Ford pardoned his predecessor Richard Nixon for any crimes he had ‘committed or may have committed’ in the Watergate scandal. This was the first pre-emptive pardon by a president.
In 2001, President Bill Clinton pardoned 140 people on his last day in office including billionaire Marc Rich, who had been a fugitive for decades for fraud related to making illegal oil deals and not paying more than $48 million in taxes.
Family pardons are also not unheard of in presidential history. Before he left office, Clinton granted brother Roger a controversial presidential pardon for a 1985 cocaine-trafficking conviction.
For months, the nation wondered if the president would pardon his ne’er-do-well son over his convictions on federal gun and tax fraud charges
Trump himself pardoned Charles Kushner, father of son-in-law and ex-advisor Jared, before leaving office in 2020. Kushner was just yesterday named the US ambassador to France.
Lowell has reiterated that the only reason Hunter is facing conviction is out of political gain for his father’s enemies.
“It is a wild and terrifying story that serves as a stark warning of what is to come as some of the same Republicans who targeted Hunter prepare to resume power and have stated their intention to use the government’s vast power to pursue their perceived enemies,” Lowell told the Washington Post.
In June, Biden repeated his vow not to pardon his son in his first public comments on Hunter since last week’s conviction. Hunter could face up to 25 years in prison.
He also said he was satisfied his son got a fair trial and reiterated his support for him.
‘I’m extremely proud of my son Hunter. He has overcome an addiction. He’s one of the brightest, most decent men I know. And I am satisfied that I’m not going to do anything. I said I would abide by the jury decision. I will do that. And I will not pardon him,’ Biden said on Thursday.
And he answered a simple ‘no’ when asked directly if he would commute Hunter’s sentence.
Both Biden and his spokesperson Karine Jean-Pierre have repeatedly denied Hunter will be pardoned by his father.
When asked in November – just over 24 hours after the presidential election was called in Trump’s favor – whether Biden has any intention of pardoning his son, Jean-Pierre responded, ‘We’ve been asked that question multiple times. Our answer stands, which is no.’