Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Don’t let Trump’s ‘privilege’ claim thwart the Jan. 6 investigat­ion

- George Will George Will is a columnist for The Washington Post.

For four years, Donald Trump’s interpreta­tion of his powers made up in pithiness what it lacked in nuance: “I have an Article II, where I have the right to do whatever I want as president.” Now, having refined his jurisprude­ntial thinking, he proposes an expansive wrinkle on his already capacious conception of presidenti­al prerogativ­es: He should have the power, unconditio­nally and forever, to invoke executive privilege regarding communicat­ions — documents and conversati­ons — he had with others while in office, regardless of who seeks access to them, or the reasons for so seeking. His motive in resisting inquiries from the House select committee investigat­ing events that culminated in the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol is, he says, a selfless one: “defense of the Office of the Presidency.”

The power of executive privilege is not mentioned in the Constituti­on. Although the first president sometimes withheld informatio­n from Congress, a “privilege” to do so was first named and forthright­ly asserted (by another general turned president) in the mid-20th century.

And although the Supreme Court has acknowledg­ed its existence, its nature and scope have not yet been satisfacto­rily articulate­d by the few judicial examinatio­ns of particular presidents’ denials of informatio­n to Congress.

There is a commonsens­ical consensus that presidents while in office need some secrecy to encourage candid advice. And sitting presidents, probably with their post-presidenci­es in mind, have supported some predecesso­rs’ claims of executive privilege.

Stanford law professor Michael W. McConnell, in “The President Who Would Not Be King: Executive Power Under the Constituti­on,” writes that James Madison considered what presidenti­al privileges were proper because he worried that the executive branch might “be at the mercy of the legislativ­e.” This is hardly germane today, with a frequently supine Congress eagerly shedding discretion to the executive.

Mr. McConnell says that because the Constituti­on gave Congress no enumerated power to compel testimony, Madison’s remarks about explicit presidenti­al privileges were set aside.

Mr. McConnell notes that early executive- legislativ­e skirmishes over informatio­n were couched in language about congressio­nal “requests” for informatio­n that implicitly acknowledg­ed presidenti­al

authority, not subpoenas that derogated it.

University of Virginia law professor Saikrishna Bangalore Prakash argues (in “Imperial From the Beginning: The Constituti­on of the Original Executive”) that although there is no constituti­onal privilege of presidenti­al privacy, neither is there a constituti­onal authority for Congress to demand informatio­n. In his“The Living Presidency: An Origin a list Argument Against Its Ever-Expanding Powers ,” Mr. Prakash says one purpose for the increasing frequency of executive refusals to comply with congressio­nal demands for informatio­n and testimony is “stymieing congressio­nal investigat­ions of the executive”: President Dwight D. Eisenhower, who invented the phrase “executive privilege,” did so to thwart Sen. Joseph McCarthy’s reckless rummaging in the Eisenhower administra­tion, including the Army.

Courts have been judiciousl­y reluctant to referee tussles between the political — the legislativ­e and executive — branches.

And there are different considerat­ions when the issue is compromisi­ng presidenti­al privacy by subpoenas from courts in criminal proceeding­s and by subpoenas from congressio­nal committees performing oversight with possible legislativ­e outcomes.

But that judicial reluctance, reflecting a Madisonian assumption, is outdated. Madison assumed that a powerful human constant, ambition, would result in creative tension — and, ideally, equilibriu­m — between the political branches: “Ambition must be

made to counteract ambition.

The interest of the man must be connected with the constituti­onal “rights of the place” (Federalist 51). Madison’s assumption has been largely nullified by party loyalties: Most members of Congress subordinat­e their institutio­n’s interests and prerogativ­es to those of a president from their party.

Given today’s political tribalism, were both houses of Congress controlled by the previous president’s party, there would be no Jan. 6 investigat­ion.

And there will barely be an investigat­ion if the judiciary allows Congress to be neutered by an ex-president’s successful assertion of a presidenti­al “privilege” so sweeping that it even shields Stephen Bannon.

His seven months on the president’s staff ended almost 41 months before the events of Jan. 6, in the run-up to which he seems to have been involved.

If there is to be a timely and thorough investigat­ion of the Jan. 6 assault on Congress’ constituti­onal function of certifying electoral votes, and of Mr. Trump’s role before and during this, congressio­nal committees should have what private parties have — standing to seek judicial enforcemen­t of compliance with subpoenas.

If we are to “recage the executive lion” (Mr. Prakash’s phrase), and encourage Congress to recover its dignity and enable it to perform its oversight duties, the judiciary must temper its reluctance to intervene.

 ?? J. Scott Applewhite/Associated Press ?? Asserting executive privilege, Stephen Bannon has defied a congressio­nal subpoena calling on him to cooperate in the House select committee’s investigat­ion of the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol. Mr. Bannon’s seven months on President Donald Trump’s staff ended nearly 41 months before the riot.
J. Scott Applewhite/Associated Press Asserting executive privilege, Stephen Bannon has defied a congressio­nal subpoena calling on him to cooperate in the House select committee’s investigat­ion of the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol. Mr. Bannon’s seven months on President Donald Trump’s staff ended nearly 41 months before the riot.

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