Chattanooga Times Free Press

Trump asking to bar demands for taxes, bank records

- BY MARK SHERMAN

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump is hoping to persuade a Supreme Court with two of his appointees to keep his tax and other financial records from being turned over to lawmakers and a New York district attorney.

The justices are hearing arguments by telephone Tuesday in a pivotal legal fight that could affect the presidenti­al campaign, even with the coronaviru­s outbreak and the resulting economic fallout. Rulings against the president could result in the quick release of personal financial informatio­n Trump has sought strenuousl­y to keep private.

The justices have been hearing cases by phone this month in an effort to help slow the spread of the novel coronaviru­s. Six of the nine Supreme Court justices are over the age of 65.

Trump has resisted calls to release his tax returns since before his election in 2016. Now, joined by the Justice Department, he is appealing lower court rulings that determined subpoenas issued by the House of Representa­tives and the Manhattan district attorney to his longtime accounting firm and two banks for years of tax returns, bank records and other financial documents are valid.

The president is advancing broad arguments to try to stymie House Democrats. In the case involving the criminal investigat­ion launched by District Attorney Cyrus R. Vance Jr., Trump is asserting that while he holds office he cannot even be investigat­ed.

His Supreme Court arguments draw on law review articles that will be very familiar to one member of the court. “At the end of the day, ‘a President who is concerned about an ongoing criminal investigat­ion is almost inevitably going to do a worse job as President,’” Trump’s lawyers told the court, quoting from a 2009 article by now-Justice Brett Kavanaugh.

The Trump-appointed Kavanaugh previously worked on independen­t counsel Ken Starr’s investigat­ion of President Bill Clinton, which led to Clinton’s impeachmen­t in 1998. He was acquitted by the Senate the following year.

Kavanaugh is quoted five times in Trump’s main Supreme Court brief in the Vance case. Justice Neil Gorsuch is Trump’s other high-court appointee.

Trump has so far lost at every step, but the records have not been turned over pending a final court ruling.

The case about congressio­nal subpoenas has significan­t implicatio­ns regarding a president’s power to refuse a formal request from Congress. In a separate fight at the federal appeals court in Washington, D.C., over a congressio­nal demand for the testimony of former White House counsel Don McGahn, the administra­tion is making equally broad arguments the president’s close advisers are “absolutely immune” from having to appear.

The House argues that Congress has very board subpoena powers and courts should be reluctant to interfere with them. “Many momentous separation-of-powers disputes have come before this Court,” the House wrote in its primary Supreme Court brief. “This dispute … is not one of them.”

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