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|    Appeals court says Don McGahn doesn't ha    |
|    08 Mar 21 00:22:48    |
      XPost: misc.survivalism, talk.politics.guns, or.politics       XPost: alt.survival       From: jnn@nbc.com              Washington (CNN)A federal appeals court Friday severely limited       Congress' ability to enforce subpoenas it sends to the executive       branch, in a decision dismissing the US House of       Representatives' lawsuit to force former White House counsel Don       McGahn to testify.              In a 2-1 decision, the US Court of Appeals for the District of       Columbia Circuit ruled it didn't have the constitutional       authority to resolve the standoff between the House Judiciary       Committee and the White House.              "We cannot decide this case without declaring the actions of one       or the other [branches of government] unconstitutional,"       appellate Judge Thomas Griffith wrote in the opinion,       determining the federal judiciary should stay out of the fight       between Congress and the President. "If federal courts were to       swoop in to rescue Congress whenever its constitutional tools       failed, it would not just supplement the political process; it       would replace that process with one in which unelected judges       become the perpetual 'overseer[s]' of our elected officials.       That is not the role of judges in our democracy, and that is why       Article III compels us to dismiss this case."              The ruling is a major win for the Trump White House in its       attempts to block administration officials from testifying to       Congress.              If it withstands further appeals, the ruling also will have       lasting reverberations across the federal government when the       executive branch and Congress are at odds, as well as in the       court system in Washington, which hears most major separation-of-       powers disputes.              CNN legal contributor and law professor Stephen Vladeck said the       decision would have "the effect of tilting power increasingly in       favor of the recipients of such subpoenas, who can apparently       defy them with impunity," and narrows Congress' power.              A spokeswoman from the Justice Department, which argued the case       on McGahn's behalf, said in a statement Friday that the       department was "extremely pleased" with the ruling.              "Suits like this one are without precedent in our nation's       history and are inconsistent with the Constitution's design. The       D.C. Circuit's cogent opinion affirms this fundamental       principle," she said.              https://www.cnn.com/2020/02/28/politics/mcgahn-testimony-       ruling/index.html                      --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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