A Federal Judge Denied Trump's Claims of Permanent Executive Privilege
In denying the former president's claims of executive privilege, a federal judge sets a blueprint which should apply to sitting presidents as well.

Last week, a federal judge ruled that former President Donald Trump does not have the authority, in his post-presidency, to invoke executive privilege and keep documents and the testimony of former staffers shielded from the House of Representative's Select Committee to Investigate the January 6th Attack on the United States Capitol, especially if President Joe Biden, as the current office-holder, chooses to waive the privilege.
Executive privilege is the principle that certain communications between the president and some senior staff members are "privileged," and therefore not subject to oversight, such as the subpoenaing of documents or staffers. Presidents since George Washington have invoked some form of executive privilege. In 1977, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that ex-presidents do retain some right to invoke executive privilege, but did not specify how much or how little.
In this particular case, the sought-after information includes hundreds of pages of contemporaneous documents and memos detailing communications among White House officials on January 6. Trump argued that the privilege to shield documents from disclosure "extends beyond his tenure in Office, in perpetuity, and…is binding on the current executive branch." He further argued that Congress had no right to ask for the documents in the first place and that their release posed "an imminent threat of irreparable harm."
In her ruling, Judge Tanya Chutkan of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia sharply disagreed. She determined that the requests "do not exceed the Committee's legislative powers," specifying that while the list of documents is "indeed broad," "so too is Congress' power to obtain information." Chutkan also applied the test elucidated by the Supreme Court in last year's Trump v. Mazars case, in which the then-president was unable to prevent his tax preparer from turning over documents in response to a congressional subpoena. Chutkan found that the committee's position met all four factors of consideration.
As to the charge of "imminent…irreparable harm," Chutkan found the evidence lacking, writing that Trump "has made no showing of imminent irreparable harm to any interests protected by executive privilege," whether his own personal interests or those of the office of the presidency, especially if the sitting president chooses to waive the privilege. Perhaps most forcefully, Chutkan wrote in response to Trump's claim of executive privilege existing "in perpetuity," that "Presidents are not kings, and Plaintiff is not President." On Thursday, in response to an appeal by the former president, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit stayed Chutkan's ruling, pending arguments later this month. But Chutkan's decision is the right one, not only for this case, but as a blueprint going forward.
The use of executive privilege by ex-presidents should be drastically limited since secrecy is a persistent issue among modern presidential administrations: The famously opaque Bush administration cited executive privilege to resist investigations not only of itself, but of its predecessor, the Clinton administration. And despite consistently touting itself as the most transparent administration in history, the Obama years represented more of the same.
Over the weekend, The Washington Post published an op-ed by George J. Terwilliger III, who served as counsel to Mark Meadows, the former White House chief of staff, who is currently refusing a subpoena for his testimony and papers. Terwilliger claims that Biden's decision to waive privilege "fl[ies] in the face of 200 years of history," citing "how critical it is for senior aides to be able to communicate freely with the president—and how dangerous a precedent [Meadows] would set for presidents of both parties were he to appear and answer questions without limitation."
Typically, those defending the principle make this argument, that the people whom the president trusts for advice cannot be constrained by the possibility that one day, a legal or congressional investigation could call them to testify about the counsel they provide. However, there is no constitutional basis for this exception. Article I of the Constitution specifically contains a "Speech or Debate Clause" expressly granting criminal and civil immunity to members of Congress for any speech made in the course of their duties; the executive branch enjoys no such equivalent, which indicates that the Founders never intended for there to be entire categories of communication for which a president and his advisers would be immune from investigation. Besides, in practice, executive privilege is much more likely to be used to shield the executive branch from oversight relating to its own wrongdoing.
This case could present a good opportunity for compromise on the issue of executive privilege: The Trump administration claims near-absolute immunity from oversight, and the Biden administration has stated that it will selectively waive the immunity on its predecessor's behalf, while still falling far short of the transparency ideal in other areas. Going forward, executive privilege should be sharply limited to the discussion of the most sensitive of issues: appropriately-classified information, matters of national security, issues of diplomacy, etc. All else should be presumed inherently disclosable unless the administration can make a case for concealing it.
And in the case of former administrations, the privilege should be pared to the bone, with only the most highly sensitive information retaining further secrecy.
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Principals, not principles.
Again, poor sarc misapplies yet another phrase.
Sure, he got it backwards, but in his defense, he is probably still drunk.
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Well, good. I hope that this applies to Barry regarding his spying orders too.
ITs cute that you think a Dem President will get the same treatment by the court as Trump.
This exactly, only (r) have to play by the rules
Baloney!
Chuck Colson of Watergate fame was sentenced to prison for possessing a single FBI file on a political rival.
What happened to Obama for employing the Director of the FBI, the Deputy Director of the FBI, the Chief of the Counterespionage Section of the FBI, the Director of the CIA, the Director of National Intelligence, and members of the Justice Department and the State Department to gather dirt on members of the opposition political party in an effort to ensure his former Secretary of State won the Presidency?
You know it won't.
Reason would then be all for executive privilege. The only reason why they support this decision is because they've evolved from being mentally challenged John Birchers (RUSSIANS UNDER MY BED!) to pretty obvious white progressives who love show trials of their political enemies.
I ask again, where is their fake "criminal justice guy" on a dude who spent ten months in solidary confinement being sentenced to three years in federal prison for the misdemeanor of "parading"?
^This
What is the carbon footprint of this charade?
I think the system should be that executive privilege's resides in the office and that only the current President can exert the privilege for himself and his predecessors. In this way the current President interest is in protecting the Office of the President and not the person. He would most likely protect that which is critical to the office.
I dislike the idea of requiring the information to concern top secrets, because that is then a temptation to make all things secret.
Finally I would like to see any exertion of the privilege have to be made in person. So a witness would need to appear before a court or Congress and then state they can not answer questions. There should be no option for no shows.
In order to do this then Trump would need to give Brandon access to all communications among the previous Administration's members. Otherwise the current pres couldn't make an informed decision at to what needs to be protected and what can be released.
Sound more like a recipe for allowing an administration to smear it's disfavored predecessors through selective releases.
Sound more like a recipe for allowing an administration to smear it's disfavored predecessors through selective releases.
That won't happen for the same reason that legislation is amended but never repealed. Professional courtesy. Remember that Washington D.C. is just a big pro-wrestling ring. It's all a show. At the end of the day they all have beers and laugh at the audience.
The President's club is pretty small and I think most would protect their predecessors just as a curtesy.
The rule should favor release. If you don't know if the information is important then assume it does not need to be protected.
>>Terwilliger claims that Biden's decision to waive privilege "fl[ies] in the face of 200 years of history
Sideshow George forgets the maniacs in charge now don't give a fuck about any hundred years of history.
How dare you beat me to that obvious joke.
the Wes Doobner episode was the last thing I saw last nite it was fresh in my head.
Let's not forget that Trump's attempts to delegitimize the results of the 2020 election flew in the face of 220 of unbroken tradition in this country in which outgoing Presidents recognized the legitimacy of their elected successors. Even the Civil War did not break that tradition, but Donald Trump broke it this year. The United States can no longer say we have the world's longest unbroken tradition of peaceful, uncontested transfers of power between elected leaders. I don't know what country now has that distinction, but the length of its tradition surely does not come anywhere near that which the United States held until about this time last year.
>>the legitimacy of their elected successors
entirely different question of legitimacy in 2020. you have read how they gave up the ghost, yes?
Funny how Democrat challenges to that legitimacy don't count in your tally. It's not like there were multiple unconstitutional changes made to law to favor Joe and it's not like they weren't caught cheating in their urban vote plantations.
Prove it. Oh wait- there were plenty of court cases all lost trying to do so.
Funny how you snowflakes can't accept reality and move on.
there were plenty of court cases all lost trying to do so
Hold on, did you just own yourself and try to play it off as a gotcha? Or are you actually ignorant about Gore and Hillary's legal challenges?
"Let's not forget that Trump's attempts to delegitimize the results of the 2020 election flew in the face of 220 of unbroken tradition in this country in which outgoing Presidents recognized the legitimacy of their elected successors."
Dan S is such a shitbag, he must work for Cato. This douche believed all of the Russian Fever Dreams. You have no room to talk, bitch boy
When you're simping for the FBI (which every writer at this publication did) you don't get to pretend like you're anything other than a bitch boy
What I stated was the absolute truth. Every single time a President took over from another living President, from John Adams replacing George Washington to Donald Trump replacing Barack Obama, the outgoing President acknowledged that the incoming one had been legitimately elected. Every single time. It was something Americans could be proud of. For the first time in our history, Donald Trump refused to acknowledge the legitimacy of his replacement, Joe Biden. And there was violence associated with that refusal. That's a simple fact. And one all Americans should be ashamed of.
P.S. I would be proud to work for Cato, if I worked in a political field at all.
No election so obviously frauded should ever be recognized. It was a coup against the American people.
If true, what a stupid and disgusting tradition.
Dan, the problem here was that Trump genuinely believed that there was massive fraud. I'm still not convinced that there wasn't significant fraud. Don't forget that New Jersey had to redo an entire primary due to mail vote fraud, and almost every potential method of diagnosing and preventing fraud was either sabotaged or was never implemented in the first place. We can't prove a positive, but the entire system has been implemented so that we cannot prove a negative either.
You cannot have a tradition where someone is forced to accept something that they genuinely believe is corrupt.
If there was an "attack" on the Capitol, shouldn't at least one person have died?
So you're saying it was an attack, just with the victim/aggressor reversed.
When you go for your afternoon jog, are the goalposts heavier or lighter than if you went for a morning jog?
Sigh... How did he move the goalposts, sarcasmic.
You don't know what that phrase actually means, do you.
Well, many of the defendents will likely die younger due to their mistreatment in federal jail. Ten months of solidary confinement is psychological abuse.
I believe people did die. That notwithstanding, you can say one attacked a store even if it was just broken glass.
But hey- do whatever you gotta do to downplay it.
Fuck Donald Trump
that blonde chick says he's boring.
I think the big fear here is that Trump knows he was once caught on tape referring to "a black woman" and from the tone of his voice you could tell he wasn't capitalizing "black".
He didn't audially capitalize "Black"?
WTF I think Trump is Hitler now.
I assume if anything was damaging to Trump it would have been leaked already, just another power play by the national socialists...er democrats.
You may be dumb, but are you as dumb as a Koch whore pretending like January 6th was a "muh..insurrection"?
Amazing how little daylight there is between Maddow and your average Reason writer. Both played the role of mentally challenged John Birchers for four years and now are playing the role of "law and order" after applauding riots.
ReaCNN strikes again
Man, it's like there are these things called facts and they just hurt your feelings so.
Back to your safe space I guess.
"Facts" like Russians being under my bed? Where were the "facts" exactly in that insane conspiracy believed only by partisans?
there's a red under my bed
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wRpAANsoG8I
It is a bad idea to apply the same rules of executive privilege to a sitting president as to a former president. In addressing current situations, a president needs candor and honest opinions from advisors. Realtime second guessing by Congress or the public would jeopardize national security among other things. Once out of office, all bets are off and transparency should be maximized without compromising national security.
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I might agree with this judgement, if I thought for a moment that it was a ruling against the presidency and not against Trump. The actions of the courts seem to verge on writs of attainder sometimes, where one set of laws applies to those they favor and another to their hated opponent, Trump.
Lol tick tock tRump supporters and sycophants