I have full confidence that Senate Democrats will use the James Cowey hearings to pin an obstruction of justice charge on President Donald Trump.
Already, a number of learned legal scholars—like Jeffrey Toobin of The New
Yorker—have insisted on the point.
And yet, Alan Dershowitz took apart the argument last night
for Anderson Cooper. I yield to Dershowitz, because he is an authoritative
figure in constitutional law and is certainly not a Trump supporter
The Daily Caller reports the conversation:
Dershowitz
said that, constitutionally, a president may direct an intelligence agent to
stop an investigation. The “best proof” of that fact, he says, is that
Trump could’ve easily pardoned former national security advisor Michael
Flynn and the entire investigation would have been over anyway.
“Trump
could have told Comey, ‘You are commanded, you are directed, to drop the
prosecution against Flynn.’ The president has the right to do that,” he
explained. “Remember also what the president could’ve done. He could’ve
said to Comey, ‘Stop this investigation, I am now pardoning Flynn. That’s what
President Bush did.”
Dershowitz
cited the case of Caspar Weinberger, who was pardoned by George H.W. Bush
before he could be tried in relation to the Iran-Contra scandal.
“You
cannot have obstruction of justice when the President exercises his
constitutional authority to pardon, his constitutional authority to fire the
director of the FBI, his constitutional authority to tell the director of the
FBI who to prosecute, who not to prosecute,” Dershowitz elaborated.
“You
don’t believe he was trying to influence of impede any possible or further
investigation into Flynn?” Cooper asked.
“What
I’m telling you is that even if he did want it to impede it, and even if he did
impede it, that is his constitutional power. He has the right to say, ‘You will
not investigate Flynn.'”
That looks like half an argument. You can't treat behavior in isolation, but as a sequence, a narrative that doesn't have to be true, but that looks true. 1+1=2 doesn't always mean the 1's combined are a cause of 2, but the implication can't ever be denied.
ReplyDelete1. The president requesting action, requesting "loyalty"
2. Comey refusing the request, refusing "loyalty", offered "honest loyalty"
3. The president fires Comey
To any ordinary human being this looks bad. This looks like a president who is trying to obstruct justice.
http://www.cnn.com/2017/06/08/politics/james-comey-testimony-donald-trump/
----
James Comey: A few moments later, the President said, “I need loyalty, I expect loyalty.” I didn’t move, speak, or change my facial expression in any way during the awkward silence that followed. We simply looked at each other in silence.
----
How can the public trust anyone Trump wants to hire as new head of the FBI if we know his number one requirement is personal loyalty?
And how could anyone offer loyalty, even if they want to, knowing every time one of his enablers says something to protect Trump, the next day Trump admits something that contradicts what his enablers just said.
Bret Stephens offers this as a fool's mission:
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/06/08/opinion/trump-jeff-sessions-rex-tillerson
----
Bret Stephens: For those who serve the president: The price of your diligence is his flippancy. The price of your efforts to protect him is his willingness to expose you. The price of your sacrifice — of time, profit, career and, in the long run, reputation — is his indifference. The price of your loyalty is his contempt.
----
No one with any honor or self-respect would dare work for Trump, and that means he can only surround himself by scoundrels with as little interest in the truth as Trump himself.
Power corrupts, absolute power corrupts absolutely. Trump doesn't have absolute power, but he is used to replacing reality with what works for him, and surrounding himself with people who will strategically agree with him.
The biggest power Trump might now have is loyal voters who believe no matter how bad Trump is, everyone else is worse. And as long as Trump's tweets are the gospel true to the true believers, and the republican party submits to this disaster, we will live in a mad house that can only get worse day by day.
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ReplyDeleteTopic: Constitutional Law and Executive Powers
ReplyDeleteParticipants: Ares Olympus vs Alan Dershowitz
:-D
On Comedy Central!! Failing to respect someone who is an expert in the field reveals a bad attitude... at the least.
ReplyDeleteAh, the "irreplaceable" man got replaced. Bummmmmmmmer.
ReplyDeleteI have no reason to "disrespect" Dershowitz, and much appreciate his legal opinions, but legal opinions are not the only thing that mattered.
ReplyDeleteTrump demonstrates "bad character" over and over and over. And today we had a chance to hear the president be called a liar in front of the Senate, not that we didn't already know that since Trump changes his stories so frequently, but its significant.
https://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2017/6/7/15758298/comey-testimony-trump-senate
---
Comey said he was baffled and concerned by Trump’s assertion on television that he had fired the former FBI director because of the Russia investigation, as well as the initial excuse from the administration that Trump had fired Comey due to his botched handling of the investigation into Hillary Clinton’s emails.
“That didn’t make any sense to me,” Comey said. “And although the law required no reason at all to fire an FBI director, the administration then chose to defame me and, more importantly, the FBI by saying that the organization was in disarray, that it was poorly led, that the workforce had lost confidence in its leader. Those were lies, plain and simple. And I am so sorry that the FBI workforce had to hear them, and I am so sorry that the American people were told them.”
---
Of course Republicans Cruz and Romney said the same thing before the election, and these things will continue. We learn, as if we didn't know, nothing Trump says can be trusted, unless he's incriminating himself after he figures he has gotten what he wants.
Trump can try to fire anyone he wants, and the consequence was getting Rosenstein to appoint Robert Mueller to a special counsel.
There surely is partisanship here, but only because the majority of Republicans have lost their minds and need to defend the indefensible. If partisan interest dominated, Democrats could hope for nothing better than Trump to stay in office through 2018.
"60 Minutes" did an extensive i/v w/Comey a few years ago. I was v impressed. I'm not anymore.
ReplyDeleteIs it ethical or legal to Leak a private conversation w/POTUS in hopes of engendering a Special Prosecutor? Because Comey was AFRAID of Trump?
Or exonerating Hillary, and later publicly putting her under investigation? Which he doesn't have the authority to do?
So many other problems w/Comey. He's a consummate Operator. - Rich Lara
I've often wondered what these judges believe President Trump does have the power to do.
ReplyDeleteI am also vexed by this standard being used about the words Trump used on the campaign trail being positioned as indicating motive, and thus material to ordering a stay or saying something is unconstitutional. Where did that standard come from??? Politicians stay stuff all the time.
More importantly, there is a key question here...
ReplyDeleteWho runs the government? Elected officials or unelected judges and bureaucrats?
As I've said here many times before, deference should be given to the elected branches of government.
And as I've said, the United States Constitution ought be at the very center of debate. It's in place./ no matter what these mealymouth silly people say. It should, must, and ought be. And the way everyone is behaving shows reverence and respect for our
ReplyDeleteCharters ( Declaration of Independence, Inited States Constitution, and the Bill of Rights). Are we to attach ourselves to a standard, or fall hopelessly off the pillar? That is our decision. Because there are always generational movements and desires -- based on delights and disappointments, disgusts and. beautiful encounters, music, joy, war, et cetera.
What I see with the liberals on America are the passions, the lusts, etc. What's next? We decide.
Britain is weak.
Rich Lara: Is it ethical or legal to Leak a private conversation w/POTUS in hopes of engendering a Special Prosecutor? Because Comey was AFRAID of Trump?
ReplyDeleteIs it ethical to speak out when you're fired for doing your job?
Trump considers himself a problem solver, wanted Comey to "lift the cloud", and when Comey refused, Trump fired Comey, but that didn't solve the problem. The cloud remains.
At least we're not in Russia where political enemies end up dead. Comey was not afraid for his life. He was afraid of the FBI losing the trust of the United States citizens.
The world where the FBI director does the private room dealings with the president, to decide what is justice is a world we don't want to live in.