Nadler blasts White House effort to block ex-aides’ testimony
WASHINGTON — House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerry Nadler, D-N.Y. said Tuesday that the White House’s effort to stop or limit former staff from speaking fully before Congress amounted to a “shocking and dangerous assertion of executive privilege and absolute immunity.”
“The White House is advancing a new dangerous theory of crony privilege. It makes absolute immunity look good by comparison. Where are the limits?” he asked at a hearing featuring former Trump campaign manager Corey Lewandowski. “This is a cover-up, plain and simple.”
The White House on Monday night invoked executive privilege over any discussions Lewandowski might have had with Trump and other top White House staff that were not already included in special counsel Robert Mueller’s report.
The White House also ordered two former top aides to defy congressional subpoenas, with White House counsel Pat Cipollone writing to Nadler that “constitutional immunity” protected former aides Rob Porter, the ex-White House staff secretary, and Rick Dearborn, who served as deputy chief of staff, from having to testify. The White House was backed up by the Justice Department on the matter.
RELATED: Donald Trump and Corey Lewandowski
4 PHOTOSDonald Trump and Corey LewandowskiSee GalleryDonald Trump and Corey Lewandowski
Republican U.S. presidential candidate Donald Trump’s campaign manager Corey Lewandowski (L) looks on as Trump speaks about the results of the Florida, Ohio, North Carolina, Illinois and Missouri primary elections during a news conference held at his Mar-A-Lago Club in Palm Beach, Florida, U.S. on March 15, 2016.
(REUTERS/Joe Skipper/File Photo)
Donald Trump, president and chief executive of Trump Organization Inc. and 2016 Republican presidential candidate, center, pauses while speaking during a news conference with his son Eric Trump, center right, and Corey Lewandowski, campaign manager for Trump, center left, at the Mar-A-Lago Club in Palm Beach, Florida, U.S., on Tuesday, March 15, 2016. Billionaire Trump fell short of his goal of winning the two key states he needed to clear most of the Republican presidential field, securing a huge victory in Florida to knock out Senator Marco Rubio while losing Ohio to Governor John Kasich.
(Photographer: Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
Former campaign manager Corey Lewandowski waits for Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump to arrive for a rally at a car dealership in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, U.S. October 15, 2016.
(REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst)
Republican Presidential candidate Donald Trump’s campaign manager Corey Lewandowski (C) is seen allegedly grabbing the arm of reporter Michelle Fields in this still frame from video taken March 8, 2016 and released by the Jupiter Police Department March 29, 2016. Lewandowski, 42, was arrested in Florida on Tuesday and charged with battery, police records show.
(Jupiter Police Department/Handout via Reuter )
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Porter, Dearborn and Lewandowski had all been subpoenaed to appear before the committee for Tuesday’s hearing, titled “Presidential Obstruction of Justice and Abuse of Power.”
In his opening statement at the hearing, Lewandowski told the panel that Democrats had sold Americans “a false narrative” about possible collusion between the campaign and Russia during the 2016 presidential race.
“What there has been, however, is harassment of the president from the day he won the election,” said Lewandowski.
Nadler asked Lewandowski whether he had met with Trump alone in the Oval Office in June 2017, as referenced in Mueller’s report, and discussed limiting the scope of the Mueller investigation. Lewandowski asked for the committee to provide him with a particular citation in the report before he would answer the question.
Lewandowski stonewalled questions asked by Democrats. “The White House has directed me that I not disclose the substance of any conversations with the president or his advisers,” he said.
During an exchange with Rep. Steve Cohen, D-Tenn., Lewandowski said that Trump’s request that he deliver a message to then-Attorney General Jeff Sessions to limit the Mueller inquiry had not violated any laws.
“I didn’t think the president asked me to do anything illegal,” he said.
The hearing was the first the committee had held since it passed a measure defining the process of investigating the president’s possible obstruction of justice with a view to determining whether to recommend articles of impeachment against Trump to the full House.
Trump appeared satisfied with his former aide’s opening comments, tweeting a few minutes later that Lewandowski’s remarks at the top of the hearing had been “beautiful.”
Nadler had blasted the White House moves ahead of the hearing. “The President would have us believe that he can willfully engage in criminal activity and prevent witnesses from testifying before Congress — even if they did not actually work for him or his administration,” Nadler said in a statement on Monday night.
“If he were to prevail in this cover-up while the Judiciary Committee is considering whether to recommend articles of impeachment, he would upend the separation of powers as envisioned by our founders,” he added.
White House deputy press secretary Steven Groves, with regard to Porter and Dearborn, said that previous administrations had taken similar legal positions regarding their staff.
Groves added that while Lewandowski would testify about what was in Mueller’s report, information about his communications with Trump or the president’s senior advisers “not already disclosed in the Mueller report … remains confidential. Congress cannot compel disclosure of the substance of those communications, and Mr. Lewandowski has been directed not to testify about them.”
Rob Porter’s lawyer, Brant W. Bishop, said in a statement Tuesday that his client was “under conflicting and contradictory directives from two coequal branches: Congress has instructed him to testify and the President has instructed him not to do so.”
“Mr. Porter’s absence today reflects his respect for the constitutional responsibilities of all three branches of the federal government in resolving this conflict. Congress and the President may reach an accommodation, or the Judiciary may resolve the conflict in the courts,” Bishop said. “As Mr. Porter communicated to Chairman Nadler yesterday evening, if and when this conflict is resolved, he will fulfill his duty, whether that means to provide appropriate testimony or to uphold the prerogatives of the Office of the Presidency.”
The widely expected White House moves on Porter, Dearborn and Lewandowski — each of whom were featured prominently in Mueller’s report — echoed earlier attempts to curtail or prevent former staffers from testifying before Congress, such as former White House counsel Donald McGahn
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