IS CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS UP TO THE TASK?
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Another challenge for Chief
Justice John Roberts.
The Constitution is, in many
respects, vague. And no part of our founding charter has more gaps than the
impeachment clauses.
At the time of drafting of
the Constitution, the colonists were still recovering from a bitter 8-yr. war
for independence, in which their adversary was the armed forces of the British
King George III -- the tyrannical monarch who had stripped them of their right
to self-government. So while The Founders understood the need for an executive
department of any effective government, they were wary of recreating anything
close to a monarchy. The result was a compromise, a balanced structure: i) a
legislature (it is no happenstance that the creation of Congress is the first
Article), ii) an Executive, and iii) a Judiciary.
One of the checks in this
balance was to give the Legislature the power to remove any member of the Executive
branch, including the President -- by impeachment.
But the Founders chose not to
provide many details regarding the impeachment process. All they told us in
Article I was that i)"the
House shall have the sole power of Impeachment," and the Senate "the sole power to try
all Impeachments," ii) "When the President of the United States is
tried, the Chief Justice shall preside,"
and iii) It takes a two-thirds vote to convict, and the punishment is limited
to removal from office.
That's it. The Article says
nothing about witnesses, hearings, or any other procedural aspects in either
house, beyond the requirement that "the Chief Justice shall preside" at
the impeachment trial of a President.
(Indeed, it is only until we
reach Article II that we learn the standard for Impeachment and Conviction is
"Treason, Bribery, or other high Crimes and Misdemeanors.")
Now, facing the third-ever presidential
impeachment trial in history, our leaders grapple with procedural issues left
unspecified by The Founders, and those procedural issues are potentially of
great significance on the issue of this President's guilt.
The most prominent question
today is should the Senate hear witnesses. Precedent suggests the answer is
"yes"-- there have been fifteen prior impeachment trials in the
Senate, (two involving Presidents) and all have had witness testimony. And
there is no Constitutional bar against witnesses in what the Constitution
refers to as an impeachment "trial."
But Mitch McConnell, the Majority Leader in the Senate, has thus far vowed to
ignore precedent and will bar the calling of relevant and material witnesses. He
even considers that his Constitutional oath to do "impartial justice"
permits him to coordinate every aspect of
trial management with counsel for the President, who objects to
witnesses.
But wait a minute. While
Mitch McConnell is not mentioned in the
Constitution, John Roberts is. Indeed, it is the Chief Justice of the United
States who shall "preside" over the trial, not the Majority Leader.
So why isn't it up to John Roberts to decide whether witnesses shall appear?
(Black's Law Dictionary lists the definition of "preside" as "to
hold court.")
Absent anything in the
Constitution to the contrary, it seems obvious that the witness dispute should
be resolved by the ruling of the constitutionally appointed "Presiding
Officer" of the trial.
Why isn't "Let
Presiding Officer Decide" the guiding principle here? Because the Senate, without a shred of Constitutional
authority, has adopted a set of rules that would effectively strip the
Presiding Officer of much of his power to "preside" over the trial.
Are those Senate rules
Constitutional? I keep a pocket copy of the Constitution in my backpack. I have
re-read it a dozen times. I see nothing in there giving Mitch McConnell, or a
majority herd of senatorial sheep, the power to limit the Chief Justice's
Constitutional power-- and duty-- to "preside"
over this constitutionally mandated "trial."
Is there a remedy for this
illicit power grab? Yes. The remedy is
for the Chief Justice of the United States to exercise his sworn duty and "preside"
over the trial unencumbered by
unconstitutional Senate rules.
If he deems it relevant to
call witnesses, he has the power and the duty to do so, notwithstanding the
Trumpist views of Messrs. McConnel, Cipollone, et. al.
But even assuming the Senate
did get, from some unknown source, the right to make impeachment rules that
"fill in the blanks" left by the Founders, whence comes the assertion
that the Senate can overrule the Presiding Officer on any issue? The claimed
source is the Senate's Impeachment Rule VII, which provides:
"The
Presiding Officer on the trial may rule on all questions of evidence,
including, but not limited to, questions of relevancy, materiality, and
redundancy of evidence and incidental questions...,"but later in the Rule
the Senators granted themselves the right,
by majority vote, to overrule the Presiding Officer with respect to those rulings.
What the Constitution giveth, the
Senate taketh away.
Rule VII is also the basis of
numerous media articles that erroneously state that every ruling by the Chief Justice is subject to being overturned by
the will of the Majority Leader, or the majority, and therefore the appointment
of the Chief Justice is "ceremonial." Talk about "fake
news." I would not be surprised if you cannot find the word
"ceremonial" in your copy of the Constitution, because I cannot find
it in my copy either.
Conclusions:
1. The Senate lacks authority to adopt any rule placing any limit
whatsover on the Chief Justice's power to preside over this trial. In his
capacity as Presiding Officer, Justice Roberts has unlimited authority to compel the
attendance of witnesses and the production of documents. If the occasion
arises, he should do so.
2. Even if one were to assume
Senate Rule VII passed Constitutional muster, the rule is quite limited, and would not prevent the Chief Justice from
issuing a subpoena requiring the attendance of a witness or the production of
documents. The ability to overturn a ruling on relevance, is not a grant of
total authority to overrule every act of the Presiding Officer. And the presiding
Officer, should so rule.
Will our Chief Justice rise
to the occasion and do the right thing here? My bet is "Nyet."
A shorter version of this piece has been posted on Time.com: https://time.com/5768467/john-roberts-mitch-mcconnell-witnesses/
A shorter version of this piece has been posted on Time.com: https://time.com/5768467/john-roberts-mitch-mcconnell-witnesses/
A bientot.
...............................................
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