WASHINGTON (AP) — The U.S. Constitution gives
the House “the sole power of impeachment” — but confers that authority
without an instruction manual.
Now comes the battle royal over exactly what it means.
In
vowing to halt all cooperation with House Democrats’ impeachment
inquiry, the White House on Tuesday labeled the investigation
“illegitimate” based on its own reading of the Constitution’s vague
language.
In an eight-page letter, White
House counsel Pat Cipollone pointed to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s
failure to call for an official vote to proceed with the inquiry as
grounds to claim the process a farce.
“You
have designed and implemented your inquiry in a manner that violates
fundamental fairness and constitutionally mandated due process,”
Cipollone wrote.
But Douglas Letter, a
lawyer for the House Judiciary Committee, told a federal judge Tuesday
that it’s clear the House “sets its own rules” on how the impeachment
process will play out.
The White House
document, for its part, lacked much in the way of legal arguments,
seemingly citing cable news appearances as often as case law. And legal
experts cast doubt upon its effectiveness.
“I
think the goal of this letter is to further inflame the president’s
supporters and attempt to delegitimize the process in the eyes of his
supporters,” said Stephen Vladeck, a law professor at the University of
Texas.
Courts have been historically
hesitant to step in as referee for congressional oversight and
impeachment. In 1993, the Supreme Court held that impeachment was an
issue for the Congress and not the courts.
In
that case, Walter Nixon, a federal district judge who was removed from
office, sought to be reinstated and argued that the full Senate, instead
of a committee that was established to hear testimony and collect
evidence, should have heard the evidence against him.
The
court unanimously rejected the challenge, finding impeachment is a
function of the legislature that the court had no authority over.
As
for the current challenge to impeachment, Vladeck said the White House
letter “does not strike me as an effort to provide sober legal
analysis.”
Gregg Nunziata, a Philadelphia
attorney who previously served as general counsel and policy advisor to
Republican Sen. Marco Rubio, said the White House’s letter did not
appear to be written in a “traditional good-faith back and forth between
the legislative and executive branches.”
He called it a “direct assault on the very legitimacy of Congress’ oversight power.”
“The
Founders very deliberately chose to put the impeachment power in a
political branch rather the Supreme Court,” Nunziata told The Associated
Press. “They wanted this to be a political process and it is.”
G.
Pearson Cross, a political science professor at the University of
Louisiana at Lafayette, said the letter appeared to act as nothing more
than an accelerant on a smoldering fire.
“It’s
a response that seems to welcome a constitutional crisis rather than
defusing one or pointing toward some strategy that would deescalate the
situation,” Cross said.
After two weeks of a
listless and unfocused response to the impeachment probe, the White
House letter amounted to a declaration of war.
It’s
a strategy that risks further provoking Democrats in the impeachment
probe, setting up court challenges and the potential for lawmakers to
draw up an article of impeachment accusing President Donald Trump of
obstructing their investigations.
Democrats
have said that if the White House does not provide the information, they
could write an article of impeachment on obstruction of justice.
It
is unclear if Democrats would wade into a lengthy legal fight with the
administration over documents and testimony — or if they would just move
straight to considering articles of impeachment.
House
Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff, D-Calif., who is leading
the Ukraine probe, has said Democrats will “have to decide whether to
litigate, or how to litigate.”
But they don’t want the fight to drag on for months, as he said the administration seems to want to do.
A
federal judge heard arguments Tuesday on whether the House had
undertaken a formal impeachment inquiry despite not having taken an
official vote and whether it can be characterized, under the law, as a
“judicial proceeding.”
The distinction
matters because while grand jury testimony is ordinarily secret, one
exception authorizes a judge to disclose it in connection with a
judicial proceeding. House Democrats are seeking grand jury testimony
from special counsel Robert Mueller’s Russia investigation as they
conduct the impeachment inquiry.
___
Mustian reported from New York. Associated Press writer Eric Tucker contributed.
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