The topic of discussion for this
Constitution Monday is the claim by Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi
(D-Calif.) that there is a constitutional crisis. Democrat leaders of the House
of Representatives are demanding something that the administration cannot give
them – the full unredacted Mueller report. Pelosi and associates are claiming
that President Donald Trump and his administration are violating their oath of
office and the Constitution of the United States.
Pelosi tells a good story, but she
does not have her facts straight. She may understand the situation but chooses
to ignore the true facts and make up some of her own. Nate Madden says that the
Constitution does not say much at all about this particular situation. He gives
the following facts as reported.
·
Attorney
General Barr released a redacted version of a confidential report on the
Mueller report, which he was under no statutory obligation to do.
·
Nadler subpoenaed the full, unredacted Mueller
report and its underlying evidence from the Department of Justice.
·
The
Department has objected to this, saying that the requested materials contain
grand jury information that is protected by section 6(e) of the Federal
Rules of Criminal Procedure.
·
That
section of the rules says that grand jury information cannot be made public without a court
order, which has not been issued.
·
Despite
all this, the DOJ has allowed a dozen members of Congress to come and view
a less-redacted version in a secure location at the Department.
·
None of the six permitted Democrats have
come forward so far to take advantage of that offer.
·
The
Department of Justice has reiterated its invitation for Nadler to
come view the less-redacted report and work out a compromise in compliance with
federal rules.
·
House/DOJ
talks fell apart, and House Democrats scheduled contempt proceedings against
Barr.
·
In
response to the contempt proceedings, the White House invoked executive privilege over the
contested portions of the Mueller report.
Madden continues by explaining that
the website for the House of Representatives says, “Constitution says nothing
about congressional investigations and oversight.” However, Democrats claim
that oversight powers of Congress are “implied by historical understanding of
the Founders, who got their understanding of it from Congress’ forerunners in
the British parliament.”
The Democrats make their silly
comments even though there is “no specific language in the document that gives
Congress the ability to issue subpoenas” or any instructions to the executive
branch on how to handle such a situation. The administration is being obedient
to law by withholding information from the grand juries, information that
cannot be released without a court order. Madden closes with this statement.
And given the nature of the situation,
the argument could very easily be made that the executive branch has already
more than upheld its constitutional obligations to Congress’ implied oversight
powers by its repeated offers to allow leaders from both parties from both
chambers to come and view the document, minus the secret grand jury
information.
At most, we appear to be looking at a
constitutional question – not a crisis.
It appears that the Democrats are
not in this battle for an opportunity to read the Mueller report. Not one of
the six designated Democrat leaders in Congress has accepted the offer from the
Department of Justice to read the less-redacted report. It appears that the
Democrats are simply continuing their fight to get rid of Trump, and they do
not seem to care how they do it.
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