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Monday, August 06, 2007
Paul Greenberg :: Townhall.com Columnist
The consolations of history
by Paul Greenberg
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Knowing a little history is a great time-saver. One need only read the headline over a "news" story to realize it's an old story, and feel free to go on to the sports page.

For example: "Panel labels 2 Bush aides in contempt/ Vote seeks House citation regarding prosecutor firing" -Page 1, Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, July 26, 2007.

To which anyone with even a smattering of American history might respond: There they go again.

How long have such subpoenas been used to embarrass American administrations? Well, that kind of story was probably front-page news when John Marshall issued a subpoena for Thomas Jefferson's correspondence in the Aaron Burr treason trial.

The script had been refined many times - indeed, it had become a classic performance - by the time Joe McCarthy's notorious Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations was issuing subpoenas left and left in 1953.

The cast of characters changes from era to era, but the tug-of-war between the executive, judicial and legislative branches of the federal government has been going on since there was a federal government.

The founding fathers designed it that way, so that each branch of the government could keep the others from dominating the whole constitutional system, and therefore the people.

Checks and balances, the civics textbooks used to call it. It's not news but it's always drama when the subpoenas are being rolled out. You could almost hear the drum roll behind the opening paragraph of that front-page story:

"WASHINGTON - The House Judiciary Committee voted Wednesday to seek contempt of Congress citations against White House Chief of Staff Josh Bolten and one-time counsel Harriet Miers, setting up a constitutional confrontation over the firings of federal prosecutors."

The good ol' Washington Post ran the subpoena story on its front page, too, and its tone, too, was fairly melodramatic. The administration was said to be making a "bold new assertion of executive authority" by resisting these subpoenas, and various constitutional "experts" were quoted calling its reasoning "astonishing Š breath-taking Š Nixonian." There was talk of a "constitutional crisis."

Crisis? Confrontation? This is more like an old, old dance in which the partners know their steps very well. Congress demands testimony, documents, evidence or anything else that might embarrass an administration. Then the administration declines to provide it, citing what has come to be known as the doctrine of executive privilege.

This minuet has been going on a least since 1796, when a president named George Washington declined to give the House of Representatives documents relating to the negotiation of John Jay's unpopular if prudent treaty with the British. And the precedent was set.

It was set for a good reason. How equal would supposedly co-equal branches of the government be if the legislative were given access to the candid, confidential discussions of the executive? About as equal as they would be if the White House had access to all the confidential discussions of members of Congress and their aides. And how long would discussions in the White House remain candid if presidential aides knew that what they tell the boss in confidence might not remain confidential? Continued...

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Stahl73
The case study is the other side of the coin for activist conservative courts. I hope you like your rubber Constitution when that happens. Note that the operative word there is when.

talent scout
Nowhere in section 2 does it state that the SC is the sole authority for determining whether or not a law passed by Congress is Constitutional. It doesn't even say that the SC can determine that, it says that it may rule on cases arising from federal law, not the viability of the law itself.

For further study read the collected papers of John C. Calhoun.
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