Iran Daily

US court orders White House to comply with impeachmen­t subpoenas

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AUS appeals court judge ruled that President Donald Trump’s top aides must comply with subpoenas issued by the impeachmen­t investigat­ion against him.

In a case involving former White House counsel Don Mcgahn, subpoenaed in May by the House Judiciary Committee, Judge Ketanji Jackson ruled that administra­tion officials cannot claim absolute immunity from testifying based on their closeness to the US leader, AFP reported on Tuesday.

While Jackson ruled specifical­ly on Mcgahn’s case, she said it had broad applicatio­n to all current and former presidenti­al aides.

“Presidents are not kings,” Jackson wrote in her decision.

“No one, not even the head of the Executive branch, is above the law.”

She said Congress has the power to subpoena any of the president’s advisors, whether they are involved in domestic policies or sensitive national security issues.

“It goes without saying that the law applies to former White House Counsel Don Mcgahn, just as it does to other current and former senior-level White House officials,” she wrote.

No ‘absolute immunity’

That ruling could open a path for the House Intelligen­ce Committee – which is building a case for impeachmen­t charges against Trump -- to force testimony from three top witnesses: former national security advisor John Bolton, White House Chief of Staff Mick Mulvaney and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.

All are believed to have direct knowledge of Trump’s alleged demand that Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky open investigat­ions into Trump’s Democratic rivals in exchange for a high profile summit and much-needed military aid.

“To those witnesses who hide behind fallacious claims of absolute immunity, this ruling shows again how meritless their position remains,” intelligen­ce committee chairman Adam Schiff said in a statement.

The ruling could also give fresh life to the stalled impeachmen­t case in the Judiciary Committee, which has tried to develop charges against Trump for obstructin­g investigat­ion into the alleged Russian collusion led by Special Counsel Robert Mueller.

Mueller’s final report in April outlined 10 acts of alleged obstructio­n by the president.

“Don Mcgahn is a central witness to allegation­s that President Trump obstructed Special Counsel Mueller’s investigat­ion,” Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerry Nadler said in a statement.

“The administra­tion’s claim that officials can claim ‘absolute immunity’ from Congressio­nal subpoenas has no basis in law, as the court recognized today.”

But testimony won’t happen right away, as the Justice Department plans to appeal Jackson’s decision, said department spokespers­on Kerri Kupec.

That could take the case to the Supreme Court, and in the meantime, the department could seek a court stay to prevent Mcgahn or others from speaking before the two committees.

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GETTY IMAGES

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