The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

As Dems zero in on White House, Trump racks up court losses

- By EricTucker

WASHINGTON >> President Donald Trump knows he has fierce Democratic adversarie­s in Congress. But there is also ample pushback from the Judiciary branch, where black-robed judges who sit in courtrooms just blocks from the Capitol and in New York City have repudiated his view of executive power.

Federal judges in the last two months have accused Trump administra­tion lawyers of “openly stonewalli­ng” and of regarding presidents as kings while also deriding Justice Department legal positions as “extraordin­ary,” “exactly backwards” and just plain “wrong.”

Taken together, the court rulings eviscerate the administra­tion’s muscular view of executive power just as the impeachmen­t inquiry against Trump accelerate­s. And they embolden Democrats in their pursuit of investigat­ions into Trump’s government and finances.

“We’re not accustomed to seeing presidents suffer as many defeats in the courts as this president,” said William Howell, a University of Chicago political scientist.

The administra­tion at least temporaril­y lost its bid to shield former White House counsel Don McGahn from being questioned by Congress. It argued unsuccessf­ully to withhold secret grand jury testimony from special counsel Robert Mueller’s Russia investigat­ion. And lawyers for the president have tried to keep the president’s financial records away from Congress. In each instances, judges have overruled them.

To be sure, some of the most stinging losses have come from Democratic-appointed judges, and all could be overturned on appeal — well after the impeachmen­t inquiry has ended, or after congressio­nal Democrats have lost their appetite for the desired testimony or records. The Supreme Court, for instance, has already put on hold a lower court ruling directing Trump to produce his financial records in a case that falls outside the impeachmen­t inquiry.

And another test that awaits — a former White House official’s challenge of a congressio­nal subpoena — may yet be decided in the administra­tion’s favor by a judge nominated by Republican George W. Bush.

For the moment, though, the defeats undercut White House arguments that executive branch witnesses and documents are outside the reach of congressio­nal inquiry and make it unlikely that the administra­tion’s expansive vision of presidenti­al powers will form lasting legal precedent.

Other administra­tions have tangled with Congress, of course, and been forced to provide documents. But the rapid succession of losses in such high-profile cases has been startling, alongwith the colorful, sometimes cutting, language of the judges who have ruled against Trump.

When the administra­tion argued that McGahn was “absolutely immune” from having to testify, U.S. District Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson wrote that no such principle existed and dismissed as “neither precedenti­al nor persuasive” Justice Department legal opinions the government had cited.

“Stated simply, the primary takeaway from the past 250 years of recorded American history is that Presidents are not kings,” Jackson wrote. “This means they do not have subjects, bound by loyalty or blood, whose destiny they are entitled to control.”

She said the administra­tion’s assertion of absolute testimonia­l immunity for senior White House aides had “no foundation in law” and had distorted “establishe­d separation-of-powers principles beyond all recognitio­n.”

In October, Chief U.S. District Judge Beryl Howell told a Justice Department lawyer that though she was a well-respected attorney, her arguments in a case over whether the department had to produce grand jury testimony from Mueller’s investigat­ion were “extraordin­ary” — and not in a good way.

When the lawyer asserted that a judge in 1974 shouldn’t have authorized the release similar grand jury material from the Watergate investigat­ion involving President Richard Nixon, Howell shot back, “Wow. OK. As I said, the department is taking an extraordin­ary position in this case.”

Weeks later, she ordered the administra­tion to give the House transcript­s of grand jury testimony. That order has been appealed, delaying the immediate disclosure of records. A federal appeals court heard arguments last month.

A New York judge in a case over whether Trump couldbe forced to hand over tax returns expressed similar exasperati­on when he asked a lawyer for Trump if he was really suggesting that the president could not be investigat­ed while in office even if he shot someone in Manhattan.

“That is correct. That is correct. Yes,” was the answer from attorney William Consovoy.

 ?? ANDREW HARNIK—ASSOCIATED
PRESS ?? President Donald Trump smiles during a luncheon with members of the United Nations Security Council in the Cabinet Room at the White House in Washington, Thursday, Dec. 5, 2019.
ANDREW HARNIK—ASSOCIATED PRESS President Donald Trump smiles during a luncheon with members of the United Nations Security Council in the Cabinet Room at the White House in Washington, Thursday, Dec. 5, 2019.

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