The 2024 election cycle has resurfaced longstanding debates over presidential power and how much independence the executive enjoys from other branches of government.
Executive privilege, which refers to presidentsâ withholding communications from other branches, has come under scrutiny with issues surrounding both President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump. The idea behind executive privilege is that presidents should have the freedom to speak with advisers without fear of retaliation over the content of their comments.
George Washington University law professor W. Burlette Carter told The Epoch Times via email, âExecutive privilege is designed to allow presidents the broadest freedom to speak and act in the presidency in pursuit of the public good.â
President Trump has asserted executive privilege in office and since leaving office. Two of his associatesâformer White House advisers Peter Navarro and Steve Bannonâwere sentenced to prison for refusing to comply with congressional subpoenas while citing executive privilege.
President Trump has tried asserting privilege over several areas, including correspondence related to Jan. 6, in order to challenge subpoenas of his former aides for a grand jury probe into Jan. 6, over his financial records, and over boxes of documents he transferred from Mar-a-Lago to the National Archives.
President Joe Biden has asserted executive privilege over the audio recordings of his two-day interview with special counsel Robert Hur, who was investigating his handling of classified documents.
The executive privilege claims from both have raised questions about when its assertion is legally valid and about how much other branches can demand of the executive.
What Is Executive Privilege?
Executive privilege isnât explicitly granted in the Constitution but derives from the documentâs general concept of separation of powers.
Executive privilege is thought to have been asserted since the beginning of the republic. The nationâs first president, George Washington, refused to cooperate with Congressâs request for information on his negotiations in the Jay Treaty with Great Britain.
The concept of executive privilege was more firmly outlined in two Supreme Court cases involving President Richard Nixon. Those casesâUnited States v. Nixon in 1974 and Nixon v. General Services Administration in 1977âestablished that Congress could require storage of presidential records and that the presidentâs interests in privilege must be balanced against those of the entities seeking the records.
President Donald Trump speaks on the phone with Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull in the Oval Office on Jan. 28, 2017. National security advisor Michael Flynn (R) and White House chief strategist Steve Bannon look on. (Drew Angerer/Getty Images)
In United States v. Nixon, the Supreme Court underscored the legal importance of executive privilege by stating that it âis fundamental to the operation of Government, and inextricably rooted in the separation of powers under the Constitution.â
Multiple administrations have cited executive privilege over sensitive materials.
Most recently, Attorney General Merrick Garland cited U.S. v. Nixon in a May 15 letter requesting that President Biden assert privilege over the audio of his interview with Mr. Hur rather than comply with subpoenas from two House committees.
However, the same decision clarified that generalized interests in confidentiality werenât enough for presidents to assert executive privilege over evidence needed for âthe fair administration of criminal justice.â
What Does Executive Privilege Protect?
The controversies surrounding investigations into both President Biden and President Trump have illustrated the somewhat messy debate over what executive privilege actually protects.
Other branchesâ interests in the executiveâs activities can vary, but Congress may want to obtain information in order to better craft legislation. The judiciary could be seeking that information for prosecutions.
According to Ms. Carter, former presidents were able to assert executive privilege only âin cases alleging personal liability of the President for criminal or civil behavior.â
She said that could occur âonly so long as the action claimed to be privileged was in the course of performing presidential duties.â
âNow if the president walks outside the White House and shoots someone after having a conversation about that plan, that is a different matter. No privilege during or after the presidency,â Ms. Carter said.
Former special counsel Robert K. Hur testifies in front of a video of President Joe Biden at the U.S. Capitol on March 12, 2024. (Win McNamee/Getty Images)
The distinction between official and unofficial acts of presidents reached the Supreme Court this year regarding a different aspect of executive power: presidential immunity. In April, the Supreme Court heard oral arguments over President Trumpâs claim that he enjoyed immunity from prosecution for the official acts that the Department of Justice (DOJ) had indicted him for in Washington.
Trumpâs Privileges and Immunities
Itâs unclear how the ruling will eventually parse President Trumpâs activities on and leading up to Jan. 6, 2021.
Regardless, in distinguishing between official and nonofficial acts, the court could prompt consideration about how both executive privilege and presidential immunity apply to certain aspects of the DOJâs indictment.
Pacific Legal Foundation Vice President Jim Burling said President Trump will likely face an âuphill battleâ if he tries to assert executive privilege over communications in his Washington case.
âHe is going to have to prove whatever he did on January 6, he was acting as president rather than a former candidate or a losing candidate,â he told The Epoch Times.
Former federal prosecutor Neama Rahmani told The Epoch Times that if President Trump raises that type of defense, he might be forced to waive executive privilege, which extends to White House aides.
Mr. Rahmani said the special counselâs office may also try to force President Trump to waive attorney-client privilege. Both forms of privilege could hinder the prosecutionâs ability to make its case, he suggested.
âFor the prosecution to prove that Trump conspired to defraud the United States … they really need to get inside his head and prove that he knew … that he lost the election and that he intended to overturn the results anyway,â he said.
Former President Donald Trump leaves after addressing members of the media following the verdict in his trial in New York City on May 31, 2024. (Spencer Platt/Getty Images)
Weighing Executive and Legislative Interests
âOnce the privilege is asserted, the court weighs the interests of the various groups involved,â Ms. Carter said.
âRemember, just because the DOJ says there was a crime does not prove there was a crime. And congressional investigations can be quite political. In both situations, the privilege holderâs rights and the purpose of the privilege must be considered.â
In issuing a subpoena for President Bidenâs audio files and other documents, House Republicans told the attorney general in February that the materials served Congressâs interest in oversight of the DOJ, its ongoing impeachment inquiry into President Biden, and potential legislation reforming special counsel investigations.
The White House responded on May 16 by telling House Judiciary Chairman Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) and Oversight Chairman James Comer (R-Ky.) that they lacked a legitimate need for audio recordings because the administration had already given Republicans documents relevant to Mr. Hurâs investigationâincluding transcripts of his interviews with President Biden and his ghostwriter Mark Zwonitzer.
âThe absence of a legitimate need for the audio recordings lays bare your likely goalâto chop them up, distort them, and use them for partisan political purposes,â White House counsel Edward N. Siskel wrote the committee chairs in a letter.
Mr. Garland also raised concerns in his May 15 letter that granting the committeesâ requests for the audio recordings would chill cooperation in future high-profile investigations such as Mr. Hurâs.
Supreme Court Weighs In
Democrats controlled the House from 2019 through 2022, which gave them leadership over committees that could issue subpoenas for President Trumpâwhich they did for his tax returns and other financial information, as well as records related to the Capitol breach on Jan. 6, 2021.
President Trump fought both of those efforts, teeing up Supreme Court decisionsâin Trump v. Mazars and Trump v. Thompsonâthat helped clarify the boundaries between executive and legislative power.
The U.S. Supreme Court in Washington on May 21, 2024. (Paul Morigi/Getty Images for Demand Justice)
Even though President Trump was suing in his personal capacity and Congress was seeking private rather than official documents, the court stated that the case still raised concerns about the separation of powers.
Less than two years after Trump v. Mazars, the Supreme Court got closer to the question of what bearing separation of powers concerns had on subpoenas of privileged information. In Trump v. Thompson, the former president attempted to prevent the National Archives from handing over documents related to Jan. 6 as part of the Houseâs investigation into the events of that day.
The justices in that case upheld the D.C. Circuitâs opinion arguing that President Trump didnât prove that he deserved executive privilege over the requested documentsâeven if he were still in office.
Can Former Presidents Assert Executive Privilege?
President Trump and President Biden ironically may need to rely on each other in order to maintain or assert privilege over communications and testimony theyâd like to keep under wraps.
In 2021, President Biden rejected President Trumpâs attempt to assert executive privilege after leaving office. President Trump had tried asserting privilege over records that the House Jan. 6 Committee sought from the National Archives.
âThe constitutional protections of executive privilege should not be used to shield, from Congress or the public, information that reflects a clear and apparent effort to subvert the Constitution itself,â she said.
If President Trump wins in 2024, he could theoretically withhold the same privilege from President Biden in future investigations by either Congress or the judiciary.
An image of President Donald Trump in the Oval Office is displayed as members of the House Select Committee to Investigate the January 6 Attack on the U.S. Capitol hold its last public meeting at the U.S. Capitol on Dec. 19, 2022. (Jim Lo Scalzo-Pool/Getty Images)
Mark Rozell, dean at George Mason University and author of âExecutive Privilege: Presidential Power, Secrecy and Accountability,â has said that former presidents donât enjoy meaningful assertions of privilege.
The Supreme Court hasnât ruled on whether former presidents can overcome waivers of privilege by incumbents. However, it did touch on the issue when it ruled on President Trumpâs attempt to prevent Congress from obtaining records from the National Archives.
Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaughâs concurring opinion in Trump v. Thompson ultimately upheld the lower courtâs ruling but raised concerns about the question of whether presidents lost privilege after leaving office.
âBy protecting the confidentiality of those internal communications, the Presidential communications privilege facilitates candid advice and deliberations, and it leads to more informed and better Presidential decisionmaking,â he wrote.
Future of Executive Privilege
Like presidential immunity, executive privilege isnât explicitly defined in the U.S. Constitution and therefore is more open to future interpretation by courts than other federal powers might be. As President Trumpâs cases move through the courts, itâs unclear whether and how they will raise significant enough issues to prompt a Supreme Court decision on privilege.
âI donât think the court will decide the big issue of privilege assertions re Trumpâs handling of documents before the election,â Ms. Carter told The Epoch Times.
âMy guess is the court will say that people have a right to vote on a candidate of their choice and they donât want to interfere by handing down a ruling prior to the election or even prior to him being sworn in.â
She said the court could require a briefing on the issue before the 2024 election and therefore âserve a public purpose because people could read the arguments.â
White House trade adviser Peter Navarro speaks as President Donald Trump and Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos look on, during a briefing at the White House on March 27, 2020. (Drew Angerer/Getty Images)
Mr. Navarro has called the ruling against him unprecedented and predicted that his case will reach the Supreme Court. Although the court hasnât ruled on the merits of his case, it denied his request to stay out of prison pending appeal.
Both Mr. Navarro and Mr. Bannon received subpoenas from the House committee investigating Jan. 6 but refused to comply with them while claiming that President Trump had asserted privilege over their testimony. Both were found guilty of contempt of Congress and sentenced to four months in prison.
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit rejected Mr. Bannonâs appeal and an attempt by Mr. Navarro to stay out of prison.
Article III senior counsel Will Chamberlain told The Epoch Times that those cases were unlikely to prompt major changes in precedent.
âThe ruling was not that executive privilege was invoked, and it was found ineffective,â he said, referring to both Mr. Navarroâs and Mr. Bannonâs cases. âThe problem was they both just … defied the subpoena.â
Executive privilege generally protects advisers such as Mr. Navarro and Mr. Bannon if presidents extend the privilege to those individuals.
However, U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia Judge Amit Mehta ruled that Mr. Navarro hadnât provided enough evidence that President Trump asserted privilege over his testifying before Congress.
Mr. Bannon unsuccessfully argued that he relied on the advice of an attorney in claiming an executive privilege exemption from the Jan. 6 committeeâs subpoena.
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
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