Albuquerque Journal

Kavanaugh: Decision on Watergate tapes may have been wrong

Nominee suggested that court should possibly have not gotten involved

- BY MARK SHERMAN

WASHINGTON — Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh suggested several years ago that the unanimous high court ruling in 1974 that forced President Richard Nixon to turn over the Watergate tapes, leading to the end of his presidency, may have been wrongly decided.

Kavanaugh was taking part in a roundtable discussion with other lawyers when he said at three different points that the decision in U.S. v. Nixon, which marked limits on a president’s ability to withhold informatio­n needed for a criminal prosecutio­n, may have come out the wrong way.

A 1999 magazine article about the roundtable was part of thousands of pages of documents that Kavanaugh has provided to the Senate Judiciary Committee as part of the confirmati­on process. The committee released the documents on Saturday.

Kavanaugh’s belief in robust executive authority already is front and center in his nomination by President Donald Trump to replace the retiring Justice Anthony Kennedy.

The issue could assume even greater importance if special counsel Robert Mueller seeks to force Trump to testify in the ongoing investigat­ion into Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 election.

“But maybe Nixon was wrongly decided — heresy though it is to say so. Nixon took away the power of the president to control informatio­n in the executive branch by holding that the courts had power and jurisdicti­on to order the president to disclose informatio­n in response to a subpoena sought by a subordinat­e executive branch official. That was a huge step with implicatio­ns to this day that most people do not appreciate sufficient­ly… Maybe the tension of the time led to an erroneous decision,” Kavanaugh said in a transcript of the discussion that was published in the January-February 1999 issue of the Washington Lawyer.

At another point in the discussion, Kavanaugh said the court might have been wise to stay out of the tapes dispute. “Should U.S. v. Nixon be overruled on the ground that the case was a nonjustici­able intra-branch dispute? Maybe so,” he said.

Kavanaugh was among six lawyers who took part in the discussion in the aftermath of independen­t counsel Kenneth Starr’s investigat­ion that led to the impeachmen­t of President Bill Clinton. Kavanaugh had been a member of Starr’s team.

The discussion was focused on the privacy of discussion­s between government lawyers and their clients.

Philip Lacovara, who argued the Watergate tapes case against Nixon and moderated the discussion, said Kavanaugh has long believed in a strong presidency. “That was Brett staking out what has been his basic jurisprude­ntial approach since law school,” Lacovara said in a telephone interview Saturday.

Still, Lacovara said, “it was surprising even as of 1999 that the unanimous decision in the Nixon tapes case might have been wrongly decided.”

The article was among a pile of material released in response to the committee’s questionna­ire.

Kavanaugh was asked to provide informatio­n about his career as an attorney and jurist, his service in the executive branch, education, society membership­s and more.

It’s an opening look at a long paper trail that lawmakers will consider as they decide whether to confirm him. The high court appointmen­t could shift the court rightward for years to come.

A longtime figure in the Washington establishm­ent, Kavanaugh acknowledg­ed in the questionna­ire that he had joined clubs that he said once had discrimina­tory membership policies.

Asked to list the 10 most significan­t cases for which he sat as a judge, Kavanaugh cited nine in which “the position expressed in my opinion (either for the court or in a separate writing) was later adopted by the Supreme Court.”

 ??  ?? Judge Brett Kavanaugh
Judge Brett Kavanaugh

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