https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/polit...W5A?li=BBnbcA1
Special Counsel Robert Mueller said last month that charging 
President Trump  with a crime “was not an option we could consider” because of the  Justice Department policy barring the prosecution of sitting presidents.
             
 Democrats are now talking about finding a way to change that.
“Congress  should make it clear that presidents can be indicted for criminal  activity, including obstruction of justice," Massachusetts Sen. 
Elizabeth Warren, a Democratic presidential candidate,
 recently proposed.
WARREN PROPOSES LAW SAYING A PRESIDENT CAN BE INDICTED
And  other congressional Democrats have since said they are considering  whether the DOJ's Office of Legal Counsel 1973 memorandum against  charging a sitting president should be revoked -- though no legislation  has been introduced just yet.
“It's fair to say that one of the  options we should consider is revisiting that Department of Justice rule  so you don't have a rogue and lawless president immunized from criminal  prosecution,” New York Rep. Hakeem Jeffries, the chairman of the House  Democratic Caucus, 
told The Hill.
Another  lawmaker, Virginia Rep. Gerry Connolly, a member of the House Oversight  and Reform Committee, suggested that a measure revoking the policy  could be included in some sort of spending package or authorization  bill.
“I guarantee you it will be a topic of discussion,” Connolly told The Hill.
While  Mueller in his report said his investigation found no evidence of a  criminal conspiracy between the Trump campaign and Russia during the  2016 election, the special counsel declined to issue a conclusion in the  report about whether Trump obstructed justice through his comments and  actions related to the investigation. The president repeatedly referred  to the probe as a "witch hunt" and allegedly sought to have Mueller  removed -- but he never did, and Trump has recently disputed that he  even sought the special counsel's ouster.
“Charging the president  with a crime was not an option we could consider,” Mueller said during  his public statement last month, adding that “it would be unfair to  accuse someone of a crime when there could be no court resolution of the  charge.”
After the release of the Mueller report, Attorney  General Bill Barr said he determined no crime had been committed by the  president, but Democrats have argued Trump would have been charged with  obstruction had he not been president. Republicans, meanwhile, have  countered that Trump could not have been charged with obstruction since  Mueller determined there was no underlying crime of conspiring with the  Russians.
The  fresh chatter about upending the DOJ guidance amounts to the latest  Democratic bid to reexamine federal policy toward alleged wrongdoing of  sitting presidents.
Last month, House Judiciary Chairman Jerrold  Nadler, D-N.Y., and other Democrats introduced the “No President Is  Above the Law Act.” The sponsors said in a news release at the time that  it would pause the statute of limitations for any federal offense  committed by a sitting president and “ensure that presidents can be held  accountable for criminal conduct just like every other American and not  use the presidency to avoid legal consequences.”
"No person can  be permitted to evade accountability for their actions just because they  happen to be president," Nadler said. "I have concerns with the Justice  Department interpretation that a sitting president cannot be indicted,  but if that is the policy, a president who commits a crime before or  during their term in office, could exploit this loophole and avoid  prosecution just because the statute of limitations has run out. This is  unacceptable. The presidency is not a get-out-of-jail-free card."
Even though Barr said he determined no crime had been committed by the president,
 several Democratic presidential candidates are now indicating on the campaign trail that they would support a DOJ investigation into whether Trump obstructed justice if they win the White House in 2020.
California  Democratic Sen. Kamala Harris said last week she believes the only  reason Mueller didn’t recommend prosecuting Trump was because of the  Justice Department’s policy. In an interview with NPR, Harris said that  once out of office, Trump would be subject to charges – and she  suggested the Justice Department in a Harris presidency would pursue  them.
“I believe that they would have no choice and that they should, yes,” Harris said.
Another  2020 Democratic presidential candidate, South Bend, Ind., Mayor Pete  Buttigieg, said last week that if elected president, he could also  support a Justice Department criminal investigation into Trump.
“To  the extent that there’s an obstruction case, then yes, DOJ’s got to  deal with it,” Buttigieg said in an interview with The  Atlantic published Thursday.
Trump, during an interview that aired  Sunday night on ABC News, denied being worried about being prosecuted  once he leaves office.
“Did nothing wrong,” Trump said. “There was no collusion.”
DPST's cannot let go of their specious and fallacious Russian collusion narrative.
Even to chasing him with persecution/prosecution after he leaves the Oval Office. 
They best be careful - the pendulum swings - and they may well be a position to regret this action in some near future.