WP: Battered Congress Syndrome
By Dan Froomkin
Special to washingtonpost.com
Tuesday, June 24, 2008
President Bush doesn't hesitate to kick Congress around, but Congress just can't bring itself to kick back. During oral arguments yesterday about whether a federal judge should enforce congressional subpoenas against a belligerent White House, representatives of the judicial and executive branches both noted that Congress hasn't exercised its full constitutional powers.
As Del Quentin Weber writes in The Washington Post, District Court Judge John D. Bates suggested that "the House could take other actions to compel the testimony. For example, the judge said, the House could order (White House Counsel Harriet) Miers's arrest and detention in a cell in the Capitol until she agreed to testify. Such actions were fairly common in the 19th century." And Susan Crabtree writes for the Hill that Carl Nichols, the principal deputy associate attorney general, "argued that Congress could have decided to withhold Justice Department appropriations or refused to pass judicial nominations."
But the Democratic-controlled Congress, of course, hasn't done either of those things. Members instead chose to solicit help from the judicial branch -- the constitutional equivalent of running to Mommy. And not surprisingly, this didn't make Mommy very happy....
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James Rowley writes for Bloomberg that Bates "repeatedly challenged an administration lawyer to cite legal justification for the refusal of former White House Counsel Harriet Miers and Chief of Staff Joshua Bolten to obey subpoenas to appear before the House Judiciary Committee...."'There is no case that supports the absolute immunity proposition that you have before the court,' Bates told Carl Nichols, the principal deputy associate attorney general. Cases cited by the government 'seem to support something less than an absolute immunity,' the judge said."...
But Rowley notes that Bates also "questioned whether the court 'should jump into' the fight between Congress and Bush as the president's term is nearing its end. In six months, 'the subpoena will expire' and 'there will be a new president and a new Congress,' Bates said."...
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/blog/2008/06/24/BL2008062400869_pf.html