The Mercury News

Trump loses in court but wins in legal strategy

Goal: Keep info from coming out while his term, reelection hang in balance

- By Charlie Savage

WASHINGTON >> Critics of President Donald Trump cheered Monday when a federal judge ruled that the former White House counsel Don McGahn must testify to Congress — and scathingly labeled “fiction” the administra­tion’s arguments that top White House aides are immune from congressio­nal subpoenas.

Indeed, the outcome was the latest in a string of lower-court losses for Trump as he defends his stonewalli­ng of lawmakers’ oversight and the impeachmen­t investigat­ion. Other fights are playing out in the courts over Trump’s financial records and grand jury evidence in the Russia investigat­ion.

But from a realist perspectiv­e, Trump is winning despite losing.

That is because it is now late November —

not May, when McGahn, on Trump’s directions, first defied the subpoena, or even August, when the House asked the judge, Ketanji Brown Jackson, to enforce its subpoena.

The proceeding­s before Jackson consumed nearly a third of the year as she took briefs, conducted oral arguments and then composed a 120-page opinion. And her ruling was merely the end of the first step.

The Justice Department immediatel­y filed an appeal and sought a stay — virtually ensuring that the fight over McGahn will remain bogged down for the foreseeabl­e future. (On Wednesday, Jackson placed a hold on her ruling to consider the stay motion.) And even if McGahn someday is forced to show up, a new cycle of litigation will inevitably start over whether specific informatio­n he might testify about is subject to executive privilege.

Meanwhile, time is on Trump’s side. The realistic window for Congress to consider impeaching him is

closing, with the 2020 election less than a year away. If the overriding goal is to keep informatio­n from coming out while his term and potential reelection hang in the balance, the Trump legal strategy is succeeding despite all the adverse rulings.

“This is not about putting down markers for all time — it’s more about particular short-term objectives,” said Martin Lederman, a Georgetown law professor who worked on executive-power issues as a lawyer in the Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel.

Like a football team up late in a game whose defense hangs back to prevent big plays while letting its opponent make shorter gains, Trump’s legal team is looking to run out the clock, putting forth aggressive legal theories often backed by scant precedent. The strategy risks periodic bad headlines in the short term and could lead to definitive rulings that hamstring future presidents — but it is demonstrab­ly advantageo­us for consuming time.

The theories include asserting that Congress lacks legitimate legislativ­e authority to conduct oversight

of whether government officials are engaged in wrongdoing, even though lawmakers have done so for generation­s; that impeachmen­t investigat­ors cannot gain access to grand jury evidence, even though an appeals court permitted just that during Watergate; and that senior presidenti­al aides are immune from subpoenas, even though a judge rejected that theory in 2008.

House Democrats have turned to the courts at an unpreceden­ted tempo in their clashes with Trump, and they went into court Tuesday to file yet another case — this one challengin­g the administra­tion’s defiance of a subpoena for documents about its attempt to add a citizenshi­p question to the 2020 census. But they are also growing disillusio­ned with the courts as a solution.

Democrat Rep. Adam Schiff of California has made clear that lawmakers will move forward with weighing articles of impeachmen­t rather than getting bogged down in courts. He used another sports metaphor, the tactic of boxers who lean against the ring ropes and trick their opponents into exhausting

themselves.

“We are not willing to go the months and months and months of rope-a-dope in the courts, which the administra­tion would love to do,” Schiff said on NBC’s “Meet the Press” on Sunday, explaining that he and his colleagues view their investigat­ion as urgent because Trump has solicited foreign interferen­ce in the 2020 election. Because of that, Schiff said, they will not wait even for witness testimony and documents they would like to obtain.

Indeed, in another major court developmen­t Monday that got far less attention than the McGahn lawsuit, the Supreme Court blocked an appeals court ruling that the House can subpoena Trump’s financial records while the justices consider whether to hear the case — alongside a similar case involving the Manhattan district attorney’s push for such records.

Both cases generated headlines when district court judges and then appeals courts ruled against the president. But if the Supreme Court does take the appeals, justices may issue no final judgment until the court’s term ends in seven months.

Trump suggested he instead had a more principled motive than running out the clock Tuesday, claiming in a series of tweets that he would be happy to let his current and former aides tell Congress what they know, and insisting that he is only blocking them from talking to ensure that “future Presidents should in no way be compromise­d.”

“I am fighting for future Presidents and the Office of the President,” Trump said. “Other than that, I would actually like people to testify.”

His claim that he is blocking aides from disclosing what they know because he wants to strengthen the institutio­n of the presidency over the long term echoes justificat­ions of other presidents in previous disputes, like the George W. Bush administra­tion’s range of efforts to expand presidenti­al power.

The men who drove that Bush agenda — Vice President Dick Cheney and his top lawyer, David S. Addington— held long-standing ideologica­l views about executive power, said Jack Goldsmith, a Harvard professor who led the Office of Legal Counsel in the Bush administra­tion.

But “that is not true of Trump, I don’t think,” Goldsmith said, noting that Attorney General William Barr, who believes in stronger executive power as a lifelong principle, is an exception. Instead, the Trump administra­tion’s legal positions “seem like short-term tactical moves,” Goldsmith said.

To be sure, Trump may also be hoping that the Supreme Court — with its majority of five justices appointed by Republican­s now including two by him — could eventually rule for him, just as it ultimately voted, 5-4, to permit a watered-down version of his travel ban even though lower courts had blocked it.

Many administra­tions have sometimes made privilege and immunity claims to fend off or delay congressio­nal attempts to pry informatio­n out of the executive branch, Lederman noted. But prior presidents, unlike Trump, were willing to resolve disputes through negotiatio­n and compromise long before they could reach the Supreme Court.

“If the Supreme Court justices decide they want to drag these disputes out, they can,” Lederman said.

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