Dr. Peter Navarro, a former White House adviser to President Donald Trump, is preparing for a potentially lengthy legal battle to not only overturn his conviction for contempt of Congress but to establish a clear precedent for how prosecutors must handle claims of executive privilege.
Mr. Navarro was convicted in September on two counts related to contempt of Congress for not providing records and testimony sought by the now-defunct House select committee that investigated the breach of the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. Mr. Navarro was sentenced last week to a four-month prison term and a fine of $9,500, but his sentence has been stayed pending an appeal.
Speaking with NTDâs âCapitol Reportâ on Tuesday, the former White House adviser said he expects his appeal will set up âone of the most important landmark constitutional cases in our history regarding the constitutional separation of powersâ and the principle of executive privilege.
Mr. Navarro maintains that, throughout U.S. legal history, presidents have been able to assert executive privilege over their discussions with their advisers. During his trial, Mr. Navarro maintained that he believed President Trump had properly asserted his executive privilege over the documents and testimony sought by the Democrat-controlled Jan. 6 committee. However, President Joe Bidenâs administration undermined those privilege claims and insisted a former presidentâs privilege claims could be waived by subsequent presidents.
âIâm obviously fighting now for my own life, facing a prison term for standing up for principle. But the bigger issue here, the bigger mission, is to take this case up the chain, [through the] appeals court. I believe it’ll eventually go to the Supreme Court and settle good law on constitutional separation of powers and executive privilege,â Mr. Navarro said. âThe law as it exists right now either doesnât exist, itâs in a vacuum, or itâs bad law. And part of the reason I got here where I am is that thereâs some bad law at the lower level.â
Mr. Navarro said the Jan. 6 committee should have reached out to President Trump for the former presidentâs own take on the executive privilege dispute.
âI was more than happy to comply with that subpoena if they simply called the president and asked for a waiver of the privilege,â Mr. Navarro said. âAnd I think it tells the lie, in this whole case, that they never made one phone call, they never lifted a finger to call him to get the information they claimed they needed to have. Had they made that one phone call, we wouldnât be sitting here.â
Ahead of his sentencing this month, prosecutors said Mr. Navarroâs appeals to President Trumpâs executive privilege were part of a broader âbad-faith strategy of defiance and contemptâ against the Jan. 6 committeeâs requests.
Separation of Powers Could Be âIrreparably Harmedâ: Navarro
Mr. Navarro warned that if his conviction is allowed to stand and the Supreme Court either rejects his appeals or sides with the lower courts, it would set a precedent for future precedents to target their predecessors for political reasons.
âIf I am put in prison and my appeal is rejected, the constitutional separation of powers will be irreparably harmed, executive privilege will mean nothing, and it will become open season every time power changes hands on senior White House advisers to the President and the President himself,â he said. âIf there is no executive privilege, then Congress can weaponize the subpoena power for partisan purposes, which theyâve clearly done in Donald Trumpâs case.â
âEmpowering a sitting Democratic president to revoke the executive privilege of a past Republican president would destroy the privilege for all presidents,â Mr. Dershowitz, an avowed Democrat, wrote. âIt would deny future executives the right to obtain needed confidential advice from trusted members of the administration and others. That would be bad for our nation and bad for both Democratic and Republican presidents.â
Mr. Dershowitz further argued that, at the very least, the U.S. Department of Justice should have asked the federal courts to resolve questions about presidential immunity before they proceeded with indicting Mr. Navarro.
âOne point should be beyond dispute: that before a member of a past administration, such as Peter Navarro, is indicted for refusing to violate a former presidentâs executive privilege, the courts should resolve the conflict and order him to testify,â Mr. Dershowitz wrote. âThat is not the approach taken by the Biden Justice Department, which indicted Navarro without a judicial resolution or court order. That, in my view, is unconstitutional.â
As to the Supreme Courtâs likeliness to uphold the privilege claims asserted in Mr. Navarroâs case, Mr. Dershowitz said past cases generally support presidential privilege claims, though the courtâs sometimes carve out exceptions or describe balancing tests when privilege claims are asserted.
In their sentencing memo this month, prosecutors said the sentence imposed against Mr. Navarro âmust vindicate the authority of Congress to investigate matters of national importance and demonstrate that attacks on Congressâs lawful authority as a co-equal branch of government will not be tolerated.â
Asked to evaluate his chances of success on appeal, Mr. Navarro replied, âWe’ll see what happens.â
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
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