Trump Could Harness Unresolved Legal Issues to
Resist Jan. 6 Panel’s Subpoena
If the ex-president turns down the drama of
testifying, his legal team could mount several constitutional and procedural
arguments in court.
By Charlie
Savage and Alan Feuer
Oct. 22,
2022
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/10/22/us/politics/trump-jan-6-subpoena.html
WASHINGTON
— If former President Donald J. Trump decides to fight the subpoena issued to
him on Friday by the House committee investigating his attempts to overturn the
2020 election, his lawyers are likely to muster a battery of constitutional and
procedural arguments for why a court should allow him not to testify.
In the most
basic sense, any legal arguments seeking to get Mr. Trump off the hook would
merely need to be weighty enough to produce two and a half months of
litigation. If Republicans pick up enough seats in the midterm elections to
take over the House in January, as polls suggest is likely, they are virtually
certain to shut down the Jan. 6 committee, a move that would invalidate the
subpoena.
The issues
raised by the extraordinary subpoena, which the panel announced at a hearing
last week, are too complex to be definitively resolved before a potential
change of power in the House, said Mark J. Rozell, a George Mason University
professor and author of “Executive Privilege: Presidential Power, Secrecy and
Accountability.”
“We are in
a constitutional gray area here where there is no clear guidance as to exactly
what should happen,” Mr. Rozell said. “That gives the former president some
leeway to put forward various creative legal arguments and ultimately delay the
process until it doesn’t matter anymore.”
Several
former presidents have voluntarily testified before Congress, including
Theodore Roosevelt, William Howard Taft, Herbert Hoover, Harry S. Truman and
Gerald Ford. But there is no Supreme Court precedent that says whether Congress
has the power to compel former presidents to testify against their will about
their actions in office.
There are
two historical precedents, but neither generated court rulings. In 1846, the
House subpoenaed two former presidents, John Quincy Adams and John Tyler, for
an investigation into allegations of misspending by a secretary of state.
According to a Congressional Research Service report, Tyler testified and Adams
submitted a deposition.
And in
1953, the House Committee on Un-American Activities subpoenaed Truman. But
while he later voluntarily testified before Congress on other topics, Truman
refused to honor the committee’s subpoena, claiming that as a former chief
executive he was immune from compelled testimony by the legislative branch. The
House let the matter drop.
One open
question, then, is whether Truman was right. Should Mr. Trump’s legal team
choose to argue that he was, one Supreme Court precedent could prove relevant:
In 1982, the court ruled that former presidents are immune from being sued for
damages over official decisions they made while in office.
In that
case, Nixon v. Fitzgerald, the majority reasoned that presidents must be able
to perform their constitutional duties without being inhibited by the fear that
a decision could risk making them liable to pay civil damages after they leave
office. The question in Mr. Trump’s case would be whether a president could be
similarly hindered by a fear of being forced to testify in front of Congress.
Mr. Trump’s
legal team could also invoke executive privilege in an attempt to ward off the
subpoena. In another case involving Richard Nixon, the Court of Appeals for the
D.C. Circuit ruled in 1974 that a Senate committee investigating the Watergate
scandal could not force Nixon, then the sitting president, to turn over tapes
of his Oval Office conversations.
The appeals
court ruled that the Senate’s need for the tapes was not enough to overcome the
presumption of confidentiality guarding the presidential decision-making
process. That general confidentiality is important, courts decided, so that
presidents can receive candid advice from their aides about how best to carry
out their constitutional functions.
(More
famously, about three months later, the Supreme Court upheld a subpoena by the
Watergate prosecutor for the tapes, citing the greater need for them in a
criminal proceeding. Soon after, Nixon resigned to avoid being impeached.)
Unlike
Nixon in 1974, however, Mr. Trump is now a former — not a sitting — president,
and his claims to executive privilege would be weaker. The current
officeholder, President Biden, who has greater authority to invoke or withhold
executive privilege, might not support him.
Notably,
Mr. Biden declined to support an earlier attempt by Mr. Trump to invoke
executive privilege to keep the Jan. 6 committee from subpoenaing the National
Archives for White House records. The Supreme Court, ruling against Mr. Trump,
declined to block the subpoena, although it did so in a way that left
unresolved the scope of an ex-president’s powers under executive privilege.
Still,
courts might view forcing a former president to show up at the Capitol and
testify under oath differently than obtaining documents. Mr. Biden might also
be more reluctant to establish a precedent that could help a
Republican-controlled Congress subpoena him for testimony.
Mr. Trump
could also try to mount a procedural argument that the subpoena is invalid.
That tactic
has been used by nearly 30 people — among them, former aides to Mr. Trump — who
have filed lawsuits seeking to quash subpoenas from the Jan. 6 committee. Many
of these witnesses have argued the panel was improperly constituted and the
subpoenas are insufficiently connected to writing laws.
The first
argument goes like this: The House resolution authorizing the committee
envisioned that Speaker Nancy Pelosi would appoint 13 members, including five
in consultation with Republican leadership. But the panel has only nine
members, and neither of its two Republicans — Liz Cheney of Wyoming and Adam
Kinzinger of Illinois — was endorsed by the minority leader, Representative
Kevin McCarthy of California, who boycotted the process after Ms. Pelosi
rejected several of his choices.
As for the
second, lawyers for the witnesses have argued that the subpoenas were not sent
with the goal of assisting Congress in its role in drafting laws, but rather as
a politically motivated fishing expedition for embarrassing information about
Mr. Trump.
Most of the
lawsuits challenging the subpoenas on these — and other — grounds are still
working their way through the courts. But in May, a federal judge in Washington
dismissed both of the arguments claiming the subpoenas were invalid in a case
the Republican National Committee brought against the panel.
That
ruling, however, was vacated several months later by the Court of Appeals for
the D.C. Circuit after the committee dropped its subpoena for the Republican
National Committee.
A Federal
District Court judge also rejected claims that the committee’s subpoenas were
invalid in the criminal prosecution of Stephen K. Bannon, a former adviser to
Mr. Trump, who was sentenced to four months in prison on Friday for defying a
subpoena from the House panel.
In a ruling
in the case, Judge Carl J. Nichols, a Trump appointee, noted that the full
House had voted to hold Mr. Bannon and others who defied subpoenas in contempt,
indicating that the body viewed the committee’s subpoena as valid. Judge
Nichols said courts must defer to the House’s interpretation of its own rules,
so he “cannot conclude as a matter of law that the committee was invalidly
constituted.”
Still,
rulings by district court judges are not definitive precedents, leaving much to
litigate.
It also
remains unclear which route to court a fight over the Trump subpoena could
take. Mr. Trump might file his own suit asking a judge to quash it. Or he could
wait for the House to try to enforce its subpoena.
One way for
that to happen would be for the full chamber to vote on whether to hold him in
contempt and to refer the matter to the Justice Department for potential
criminal prosecution, as it did for Mr. Bannon.
It would
then be up to Attorney General Merrick B. Garland to decide whether to bring a
criminal charge.
The Jan. 6
committee could also file its own lawsuit against Mr. Trump seeking a judicial
order that he comply. In August 2019, for example, the House Judiciary
Committee sued Mr. Trump’s former White House counsel, Donald F. McGahn II, who
at Mr. Trump’s direction defied its subpoena seeking his testimony about Mr.
Trump’s obstruction of the Russia investigation.
The lawsuit
set off a series of convoluted legal fights over constitutional issues and was
still pending even when Mr. Biden became president in January 2021. That
underscores the lack of time for extended litigation in Mr. Trump’s case.
Aides to
Mr. Trump have said that he has weighed whether to testify, but only under the
condition that it be live and on television. That would deprive the committee
of controlling what gets seen or from releasing only selected excerpts.
Mr. Rozell
said that was not surprising.
“If Trump
is going to go out there and make himself vulnerable, he’s going to do it in a
public way,” he said. “It’s going to be a Trump show, and he’ll be playing to
his own crowd. At that point, legal argument and nuances would be out the
window.”
Charlie
Savage is a Washington-based national security and legal policy correspondent.
A recipient of the Pulitzer Prize, he previously worked at The Boston Globe and
The Miami Herald. His most recent book is “Power Wars: The Relentless Rise of
Presidential Authority and Secrecy.” @charlie_savage • Facebook
Alan Feuer
covers extremism and political violence. He joined The Times in 1999. @alanfeuer

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