The presidents clemency order for dozens of political allies said that it does not apply to the President of the United States, Donald J. Trump.
Why did Donald Trump exclude himself in his pardons for 2020 election-related crimes?
— Jess (@jessflight12.bsky.social) 2025-11-10T20:46:38Z
https://www.msnbc.com/deadline-white-house/deadline-legal-blog/donald-trump-pardons-2020-election-rcna243013
President Donald Trumps pardon of political allies for crimes related to the 2020 election raises a host questions, one of them being: Why did Trump go out of his way to exclude himself?
After listing dozens of allies and supporters, including Rudy Giuliani, John Eastman and others, who have faced legal exposure in various venues, the order said that it does not apply to the President of the United States, Donald J. Trump. Ed Martin, Trumps failed U.S. attorney nominee-turned-pardon attorney and weaponization czar, posted the order on social media on Sunday night from his personal account and then again on Monday morning from his official account.,,,,,,
Still, the difference between those two proclamations doesnt necessarily explain why Trump excluded himself in the new pardon. At least, it doesnt necessarily explain it legally which, of course, could be beside the point if this latest proclamation is more of a political document, given its seemingly limited legal effect on nonexistent federal prosecutions and state prosecutions that presidents cant pardon. (Im not sure of a political explanation, either, because the animating principle of the pardon is that Trump thinks the beneficiaries were victimized and did nothing wrong; perhaps the implication is that he is so above the law, which operates against ordinary people, that he neednt stoop to being pardoned as ordinary people, even his allies and supporters, would.)
Another potentially relevant aspect is that Trump has no reason to worry about being prosecuted anywhere in the short term. Not that this subservient Department of Justice would prosecute him, but the DOJ has a policy against prosecuting sitting presidents, which is what led to his two federal cases going away. And for reasons underlying that DOJ policy, he likely wouldnt stand trial in the Georgia case if it were to go forward against his co-defendants while hes in office. Plus, the Supreme Court gave him broad criminal immunity, the limits of which havent been fully litigated. (If the Georgia case moves forward, those limits could be further explored pretrial, even if such litigation wouldnt happen until he leaves office.)
Again, the legal reason (if there is one) for Trump going out of his way to exclude himself from the new pardon, as opposed to just not mentioning himself, isnt clear. But given the lack of any imminent prosecutions moving against him, it wouldnt be necessary yet for him to make the legally untested move of a self-pardon. If he is contemplating such a move, he could wait until the last minute before he leaves office to cover any and all federal exposure he might otherwise face.