The Denver Post

Experts decry as subpoenas skipped

- By Curt Anderson

The impeachmen­t process is fundamenta­lly unfair. Congress lacks authority to investigat­e the president. Witnesses should have executive branch lawyers.

White House attorneys are throwing out an array of arguments for keeping its officials from cooperatin­g with the congressio­nal impeachmen­t inquiry. But legal experts say they are making a weak case.

Some even say the refusal to cooperate with the probe run by House Democrats could amount to obstructio­n that might itself become an article of impeachmen­t against President Donald Trump.

“Not only can it be, it absolutely should be,” said Heidi Kitrosser, a University of Minnesota constituti­onal law professor who has written about impeachmen­t. “This is an effort to stymie Congress in one of its core roles.”

The inquiry concerns whether the Trump administra­tion sought to pressure Ukraine into investigat­ing business done there by Hunter Biden, son of Democratic presidenti­al candidate Joe Biden, and also probing whether Ukraine was involved in the 2016 U.S. election.

Four White House officials, including the top lawyer on the National Security Council, defied subpoenas from House investigat­ors demanding they appear for deposition­s Monday.

Although the White House did not flatly assert executive privilege as the reason, it came extremely close, Kitrosser said.

“They are probably trying to have it both ways and trying to avoid the legal and political ramificati­ons of claiming executive privilege while getting the advantage of it,” she said.

Politicall­y, an executive privilege claim could cross a line leading to more support for impeachmen­t. Legally, it’s more or less the last attempt a president could make to prevent disclosure of evidence or testimony.

The NSC lawyer, John Eisenberg, is “absolutely immune” from congressio­nal testimony as a senior adviser to the president, Eisenberg’s attorney said in a letter. The letter involved separation of powers arguments in making that claim, contending his testimony is comparable to the president himself being forced before the inquiry.

Two other officials, Robert Blair and Michael Ellis, declined to testify unless they were allowed an executive branch lawyer present. The Justice Department issued a legal opinion Monday supporting that position.

Democrats say there’s no basis for ignoring their subpoenas. In a letter Sunday to Blair’s attorney, the three committee chairs leading the impeachmen­t probe said the claims have “no merit.”

“Instead, it is the latest in a long line of baseless procedural challenges to the House of Representa­tives’ authority to fulfill one of its most solemn responsibi­lities under the Constituti­on,” they wrote.

Even if Trump were to overtly claim executive privilege, some experts say there’s no constituti­onal provision that it would apply to impeachmen­t.

“No communicat­ion involving the White House is subject to absolute immunity,” said David Driesen, a Syracuse University law professor who has studied the issue. “No person is immunized from appearing by any claim of privilege known to the law.”

This latest resistance to House subpoenas and testimony fits into the broader White House claim that the entire process is fundamenta­lly unfair.

In a recent letter to Democratic leaders, presidenti­al counsel Pat Cipollone said Trump should have the kinds of due process rights typically found in court trials: the right to question witnesses, the right to see evidence, the right to crossexami­ne witnesses, and so forth. That position has been echoed by numerous Republican lawmakers.

However, legal experts note that the Constituti­on and even prior impeachmen­t proceeding­s do not lay out a roadmap for those kinds of rights in the initial House inquiry. Instead, that would come in a trial before the Senate, if it gets that far.

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