Texarkana Gazette

Risky move: Biden undercuts executive privilege shield

- The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — It’s a risky move by President Joe Biden that could come back to haunt him — and future presidents — in the hyperparti­san world of Washington politics.

Democrat Biden has agreed to a request from Congress seeking sensitive informatio­n on the actions of Republican Donald Trump and his aides during the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on, though the former president claims the informatio­n is guarded by executive privilege.

The move by Biden isn’t the final word; Trump says he will challenge the requests, and a lengthy legal battle is likely to ensue over the informatio­n. Courts have ruled that former presidents are afforded executive privilege in some cases.

But the playbook for the legal world is different from the political world. And in the political world, “every time a president does something controvers­ial, it becomes a building block for future presidents,” said Saikrishna Prakash, a law professor at the University of Virginia who studies presidenti­al powers.

Biden’s decision not to block the informatio­n sought by Congress challenges a tested norm — one in which presidents enjoy the secrecy of records of their own terms in office, both mundane and highly sensitive, for a period of at least five years, and often far longer. That means Biden and future presidents, as well as Trump.

While not spelled out in the Constituti­on, executive privilege has developed to protect a president’s ability to obtain candid counsel from his advisers without fear of immediate public disclosure and to protect his confidenti­al communicat­ions relating to official responsibi­lities.

But that privilege has its limitation­s in extraordin­ary situations, as exemplifie­d during the Watergate scandal, when the Supreme Court ruled that it could not be used to shield the release of secret Oval Office tapes sought in a criminal inquiry, and following the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.

The Jan. 6 insurrecti­on belongs among those ranks, Biden’s White House counsel wrote to the keeper of records, the Archivist of the United States. An armed mob of Trump supporters stormed the building in an attempt to stop the certificat­ion of Biden’s election victory.

White House press secretary Jen Psaki said of the congressio­nal panel seeking the records: “This committee is investigat­ing a dark day in our democracy — an attempt to undermine our Constituti­on and democratic processes by the former president — and that context, I think, is important here, too.”

The argument that the special circumstan­ces of the attack justify the extraordin­ary release should guard against the erosion of executive privilege for presidenci­es going forward, some experts said.

If history is any guide, once the door to reviewing past presidenti­al records is ajar, future Congresses and presidents could swing it open further as politics warrant.

It’s a path followed by other Washington norms in the increasing­ly rancorous capital. In 2013, Democrats deployed the so-called nuclear option to eliminate the filibuster that would require 60 votes to approve most presidenti­al appointmen­ts and nomination­s, but maintained it for legislatio­n and Supreme Court picks. In 2017, when Republican­s took control of Washington, they took the tactic further, and during the Trump years, they put three justices on the high court by simple majority votes.

Presidents tend to be protective of their executive privilege to keep White House documents private, both for themselves and their predecesso­rs. But any White House move to deny the congressio­nal request for records on Trump’s activities could antagonize Democratic legislator­s just when Biden needs their support to advance his agenda.

The documents requested by the congressio­nal committee are part of a lengthy and rancorous investigat­ion into how the mob was able to infiltrate the Capitol in the most serious assault on Congress in two centuries.

Thousands of documents have been sought from the Trump administra­tion to determine how the insurrecti­on could have happened. Many of those requests went to the National Archives, where Trump’s correspond­ence is held during his time in office.

According to an executive order on presidenti­al records, the archivist of the United States “shall abide by any instructio­ns given him by the incumbent President or his designee unless otherwise directed by a final court order.”

“Congress is examining an assault on our Constituti­on and democratic institutio­ns provoked and fanned by those sworn to protect them,” White House counsel Dana Remus wrote in a letter to the archivist. “The constituti­onal protection­s of executive privilege should not be used to shield, from Congress or from the public, informatio­n that reflects a clear and apparent effort to subvert the Constituti­on itself.”

 ?? Associated Press ?? President Joe Biden salutes Monday as he steps off of Marine One on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington. He and first lady Jill Biden spent the weekend at their home in Wilmington, Del.
Associated Press President Joe Biden salutes Monday as he steps off of Marine One on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington. He and first lady Jill Biden spent the weekend at their home in Wilmington, Del.

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