Article written by Prof. Alan Dershowitz in "The Hill":
The decision by the Supreme Court to
review the lower court rulings involving congressional and prosecution
subpoenas directed toward President Trump undercuts the second article of impeachment that passed the House Judiciary Committee along party lines last week.
That
second article of impeachment charges President Trump with obstruction
of Congress for refusing to comply with congressional subpoenas in the
absence of a final court order. In so charging him, the House Judiciary
Committee has arrogated to itself the power to decide the validity of
its subpoenas, as well as the power to determine whether claims of
executive privilege must be recognized, both powers that properly belong
with the judicial branch of our government, not the legislative branch.
The House of Representatives will do likewise, if it votes to approve
the articles, as is expected to occur on Wednesday.
President
Trump has asserted that the executive branch, of which he is the head,
need not comply with congressional subpoenas requiring the production of
privileged executive material, unless there is a final court order
compelling such production. He has argued, appropriately, that the
judicial branch is the ultimate arbiter of conflicts between the
legislative and executive branches. Therefore, the Supreme Court
decision to review these three cases, in which lower courts ruled
against President Trump, provides support for his constitutional
arguments in the investigation.
The
cases that are being reviewed are not identical to the challenged
subpoenas that form the basis for the second article of impeachment. One
involves authority of the New York district attorney to subpoena the
financial records of a sitting president, as part of any potential
criminal investigation. The others involve authority of legislative
committees to subpoena records as part of any ongoing congressional
investigations.
But they
are close enough. Even if the high court were eventually to rule against
the claims by President Trump, the fact that the justices decided to
hear them, in effect, supports his constitutional contention that he had
the right to challenge congressional subpoenas in court, or to demand
that those issuing the subpoenas seek to enforce them through court.
It
undercuts the contention by House Democrats that President Trump
committed an impeachable offense by insisting on a court order before
sending possibly privileged material to Congress. Even before the
justices granted review of these cases, the two articles of impeachment
had no basis in the Constitution. They were a reflection of the
comparative voting power of the two parties, precisely what one of the
founders, Alexander Hamilton, warned would be the “greatest danger” of
an impeachment.
House
Democrats should seriously consider dropping this second article in
light of the recent Supreme Court action. In fairness, this development
involving the high court occurred after Democrats on the House Judiciary
Committee made up their minds to include obstruction of Congress as an
impeachment article. Yet the new circumstances give some Democratic
members of Congress, who may end up paying an electoral price if they
support the House Judiciary Committee recommendation, meaningful reason
for voting against at least one of the articles of impeachment.
It
would be a smart way out for those Democrats. More important, it would
be the right thing for them to do. It would be smart and right because,
as matters now stand, the entire process smacks of partisanship, with
little concern for the precedential impact which these articles could
have on future impeachments. If a few more Democrats voted in a way that
would demonstrate greater nuanced recognition that, at the least, the
second article of impeachment represents an overreach based on current
law, it would lend an aura of some nonpartisan legitimacy to the
proceedings.
The first
article goes too far in authorizing impeachment based on the vague
criterion of abuse of power. But it is the second article that truly
endangers our system of checks and balances and the important role of
the courts as the umpires between the legislative and executive branches
under the Constitution. It would serve the national interest for
thoughtful and independent minded Democrats to join Republicans in
voting against the second article of impeachment, even if they wrongly
vote for the first.
https://thehill.com/opinion/judiciary/474710-supreme-court-ruling-pulls-rug-out-from-under-article-of-impeachment