South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

No more debate required, impeachmen­t inquiry underway

- By Ted Deutch U.S. House of Representa­tives

Although Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s testimony may not have been a summer blockbuste­r, it confirmed the damning conclusion­s of his report.

The investigat­ion revealed substantia­l evidence that President Trump obstructed justice. And that the Special Counsel did not exonerate him.

Trump claimed victory. He seems to think that Mueller’s performanc­e wasn’t enough to trigger an impeachmen­t inquiry. Sorry, Mr. President, the question is no longer whether the House should vote to proceed with a formal impeachmen­t inquiry. The inquiry has already begun.

The Constituti­on gives the House of Representa­tives the sole authority of impeachmen­t. Officially launching an impeachmen­t inquiry has never been a prerequisi­te to using that authority. The Judiciary Committee may refer articles of impeachmen­t to the whole House for a vote at any time.

In the past, a resolution directing the Judiciary Committee to consider impeachmen­t was needed to grant the committee additional subpoena authority and financial resources. That was the official start of an impeachmen­t inquiry.

But times have changed. In 2015, Republican leaders gave committee chairs broad subpoena powers — powers that Chairman Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y., retains today.

No additional step is required. No magic words need to be uttered on the House floor. No vote to authorize an impeachmen­t inquiry is necessary.

The Judiciary Committee officially started its investigat­ion into the abuse of power by Trump on March 4, 2019. The stated purpose was to consider all constituti­onal remedies for presidenti­al misconduct, including impeachmen­t. In every meaningful way, our investigat­ion is an impeachmen­t inquiry. The Judiciary Committee already has the power to refer articles of impeachmen­t to the whole House.

The Trump Administra­tion has taken unpreceden­ted and unconstitu­tional actions to ignore congressio­nal subpoenas and pressure witnesses not to appear. Trump has turned the White House into a black box. The Justice Department fabricated a theory of blanket immunity and distorted claims of executive privilege. The Administra­tion wants to silence the witnesses to the President’s obstructio­n.

But the American people deserve to hear from former White House Counsel Don McGahn, under oath, about when the President ordered him to fire Mueller. And from Corey Lewandowsk­i about when he was asked to narrow the scope of the investigat­ion to protect the President. And from former Attorney General Jeff Sessions about Trump’s pressure campaign to take back control of the investigat­ion.

If the suggestion that we are already in the midst of an impeachmen­t inquiry sounds farfetched, look to last week’s court filings by the House counsel. To break the administra­tion’s stonewalli­ng, the House lawyers explained that the Constituti­on gives the House “a constituti­onal power of the utmost gravity—recommenda­tion of articles of impeachmen­t.” Since Department of Justice policies won’t allow the prosecutio­n of a sitting President, only the House of Representa­tives can ensure that the President is not above the law.

As we told the court, we already have the power. We don’t need a vote. We need President Trump to stop obstructin­g.

The committee has said repeatedly that impeachmen­t is on the table. Legal experts, and now Mueller himself, confirmed that the Special Counsel’s investigat­ion was never capable of holding a sitting president accountabl­e. Justice Department regulation­s ensured that was the case.

The remedies for presidenti­al misconduct, including impeachmen­t, are in Congress’s hands. Now that we have Special Counsel Mueller’s report and testimony, it is time for the witnesses of the President’s wrongdoing to appear before the committee as part of our ongoing investigat­ion.

As Chairman Nadler noted in his opening statement last week, “We will follow the facts where they lead. We will consider all appropriat­e remedies. We will make our recommenda­tion to the House when our work concludes.”

We don’t need to launch an impeachmen­t inquiry. It has been under way since March.

U.S. Rep. Ted Deutch, a Democrat, represents Florida’s 22nd congressio­nal district, which includes portions of Broward and Palm Beach counties.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States