Wednesday, April 6, 2022

July 9, 2020: U.S. Supreme Court Gives President Trump a Spanking (Twice)

 

7/9/20: President Trump wakes in a sour frame of mind. He can’t get a grip on the coronavirus. The Supreme Court is about to render two important decisions in cases involving subpoenas against him. The first regards a state request to see his tax and business records. The second involves his bid to refuse compliance to a congressional subpoena.



Chief Justice John Roberts.


 

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“The public has a right to every man’s evidence.”

 

Chief Justice John Roberts

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Mr. Trump starts his day, as he awaits the news of the Court decisions, by doing some serious tweeting. First, he defends his handling of the COVID crisis. “For the 1/100th time, the reason we show so many Cases, compared to other countries that haven’t done nearly as well as we have, is that our TESTING is much bigger and better.”

 

The virus keeps spreading, no matter how fast and furiously the poor fool tweets. By day’s end, we have an additional:

 

59,260 cases.


 

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THE U.S. SUPREME COURT renders its decision in the case of Trump v. Vance. The president’s legal team had argued that his “duties as chief magistrate demand his whole time for national objects.” 

 

For that reason, his attorneys claimed, Donald could not legally be served a subpoena to produce his tax returns.

 

That is, a president who has time to tweet 50,000 times, cannot manage to put together requested documents, despite the assistance of multiple accountants. A man who has spent 29% percent of his days in office at private golf resorts cannot be distracted from putting and driving and cheating on his score, to deal with a subpoena. A man who devotes endless hours to watching TV, and ranting about “Fake News,” is too busy to deal with a court challenge involving potential tax evasion and breach of campaign finance law.

 

In the end, the Court makes quick work in blowing Trump’s defenses to bits. The decision is 7-2, with dissenters in actual agreement with the majority on several key points. Chief Justice Roberts, in writing for the majority, notes that previous chief executives, from James Monroe to Jimmy Carter, accepted that they were “subject to subpoena and have uniformly agreed to testify when called in criminal proceedings.” In all previous cases, however, presidents had been involved in cases involving federal crimes and investigations.

 

 

He lies “like most of us brush our teeth.”

 

Trump’s lawyers claimed that this case, involving a subpoena from a New York State prosecutor, was different. If presidents could be forced to answer subpoenas from the nation’s 2,300 locally elected prosecutors, their ability to perform their duties would be impaired. They would be subject to “diversion, stigma, and harassment.” Trump’s lawyers, backed by political appointees at the Department of Justice, who filed briefs in support, argued that a “heightened standard of need” should apply. A president should only be asked to respond to subpoenas in cases of…

 

Well, in Trump’s cases, never.

 

After all, the president had already dodged a subpoena from Robert Mueller for more than two years.

 

Chief Justice Roberts blew up Trump’s first, second and third lines of defense in the first sentence of his opinion. In our system of government, he wrote, “the public has a right to every man’s evidence.” Since the earliest days of the Republic, he wrote, “every man” has included the President of the United States. 

Yes, Roberts noted, a president’s communications as president are “privileged” and rarely subject to exposure. In this case, the information being subpoenaed related solely to Trump “in his private capacity and disconnected from the discharge of his constitutional obligations.” 

In common law, Roberts explained, the only exception involving a duty to testify in response to subpoena had been in “the case of the king,” whose “dignity” was seen as “incompatible” with appearing “under the process of the court.” But, as Chief Justice John Marshall explained in 1807, “a king is born to power and can ‘do no wrong.’ The president, by contrast, is ‘of the people’ and subject to the law.” The case of Richard M. Nixon is cited repeatedly in the Vance opinion, as is the case of Clinton v. Jones, involving a matter of civil liability. The Court had previously ruled, “unequivocally and emphatically” that “Presidents are subject to subpoena.”

 

The court did rule that the president’s legal team could go back to the lower courts and file motions to have the document requests narrowed. But we can now be sure that Trump is going to have to cough up a stash of tax records. Given his long battle to keep them secret, it’s highly likely that what they reveal will not be flattering. As former U.S. senator Claire McCaskill put it recently, this is a president who lies “like most of us brush our teeth.” The chances that he didn’t cheat on his taxes are somewhere between zero and nil.

 

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The justices rightly sniffed out authoritarianism down. 

THE DECISION in the second case, Trump v. Mazars, went against the president in much the same way. In this case, Trump’s lawyers were suing his accounting firm, to keep them from compiling with a congressional subpoena for his tax records. This time, Trump’s defense rested on the argument that Congress lacked a “legitimate legislative purpose” in seeking his financial documents. 

Once again, Chief Justice Roberts wrote the majority opinion. First, Roberts dismissed the idea that “executive privilege” could shield a president’s tax records, prior to the time he was elected (or since). Trump’s lawyers were arguing for what would amount to blanket protection from congressional subpoena. The justices rightly sniffed out authoritarianism and shot the argument down. 

The idea that any chief executive could thumb his or (someday) her nose at the legislative branch would, Roberts wrote, give “short shrift to Congress’s important interests in conducting inquiries to obtain the information it needs to legislate effectively.” The Court did hold that Congress might abuse its subpoena powers, and that federal courts must be mindful of such danger. Therefore, the courts should permit subpoenas that were “no broader than necessary.”

 

The Court further noted a number of other possibilities where the legislative branch might overstep its bounds but remanded the case to the lower courts for review, where the president’s legal team has met a series of defeats. Roberts agreed that the president and his lawyers “could raise additional constitutional and legal questions in the lower courts.” 

So, not all hope for Trump was gone. 

His team immediately made it clear. They would be raising every question they could think of, including whether or not liberal justices on the Supreme Court were part of a satanic cult, and practiced child sacrifice and pedophilia in their spare time. Okay, I’m kind of joking there (but see, my post for 8/20/20, and you’ll realize it’s not entirely a humorous situation.) 

In reality, the only consolation for the president is that his attorneys have a real hope of stalling Congress and making sure lawmakers don’t glimpse the president’s tax records until after the November election. 

 

POSTSCRIPT: Adding insult to injury for the day, German Chancellor Angela Merkel clearly has Trump in mind when she compares her approach to handling the COVID-19 crisis to his. “As we are experiencing firsthand, you cannot fight the pandemic with lies and disinformation any more than you can fight it with hate or incitement to hatred,” she tells reporters.

 

“The limits of populism and denial of basic truths are being laid bare.”

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