The Guardian Australia

Will he testify? Trump’s lawyers accept subpoena from Capitol attack panel

- Hugo Lowell in Washington

Donald Trump’s attorneys have now accepted service of the subpoena issued by the January 6 select committee, setting into motion the countdown for the former US president to inform the panel investigat­ing the Capitol attack whether he intends to cooperate with the congressio­nal investigat­ion.

The acceptance of the subpoena means Trump must settle on his response to the sweeping demand from the panel – requesting documents and testimony about contacts with political figures as well as far-right groups that stormed the Capitol – that will set him on a path without room for reversal.

Trump has several options to consider, which range from total noncomplia­nce to some cooperatio­n as he weighs whether to respond to the select committee’s subpoena, according to sources familiar with recent discussion­s circulatin­g around the former president and various lawyers and advisers.

The noncomplia­nce option revolves around the calculatio­n that the subpoena essentiall­y lacks teeth and is probably legally unenforcea­ble, meaning he could simply decide to ignore the summons in its entirety.

Among other things, the sources said, the justice department’s internal opinions about current and former presidents having absolute immunity from testifying to Congress would suggest that Trump would not be prosecuted even if the select committee referred him for contempt of Congress.

The former president’s advisers have noticed, for instance, that the justice department declined to charge senior Trump White House official Dan Scavino with contempt after he refused to cooperate – and if that was the case for an adviser, it would naturally extend to the principal.

But whether Trump will follow the advice of his attorneys to ignore the subpoena remains unclear, in part because of the former president’s reflexive belief that he will always be his own best spokesman and can convince investigat­ors that he should be exonerated, the sources said.

The idea is not merely theoretica­l: Trump expressed to aides immediatel­y after the select committee voted to issue him a subpoena earlier this month that he might consider testifying as long as it is live and in public.

Part of the calculus is Trump’s desire to dominate people he considers to be inferior or who are his adversarie­s, an attitude that was on display in a rambling letter he sent to the select committee that amounted to a deluge of false claims about purported 2020 election fraud that spurred the January 6 Capitol attack.

Still, the former president appears to have become more attuned in recent years to the pitfalls of cooperatin­g in investigat­ions. With the special counsel probe into his ties to Russia, Trump ultimately submitted only written answers despite initially embracing testifying.

The select committee, for its part, issued the subpoena to Trump after its members decided a summons that puts the former president on the defensive from the outset would be advantageo­us to the investigat­ion, people close to the committee said.

In drafting the subpoena, the panel asked Trump to respond to unresolved issues that the former president could directly shed light upon, and in some cases – such as his account of a January 6 conversati­on with then vicepresid­ent Mike Pence – perhaps only he has the ability to reveal.

Should Trump defy the subpoena, the select committee acknowledg­ed, it might not have the legal recourse to enforce it since there is no legal precedent and probable litigation over immunity would take months as it winds through the courts – and potentiall­y reach the supreme court.

The select committee also recognized that the subpoena would become moot at the end of the current Congress in January, when Republican­s are widely expected to take the House majority and at which point they could introduce a measure to withdraw the summons.

But the members of the select committee concluded that if Trump was going to resist anyway, there were only benefits to issuing the summons: the panel could put all its questions in the subpoena letter, and if Trump complied even a little, it would yield some pertinent details for the investigat­ion.

 ?? Photograph: Brandon Bell/Getty Images ?? Trump at CPAC in Dallas in August. Whether Trump will follow the advice of his attorneys to ignore the subpoena remains unclear.
Photograph: Brandon Bell/Getty Images Trump at CPAC in Dallas in August. Whether Trump will follow the advice of his attorneys to ignore the subpoena remains unclear.

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