As expected, former White House counsel Harriet Miers ignored a congressional subpoena today, after her former colleagues told her she didn’t have to follow the law. The House Judiciary Committee had set up a chair for Miers’, which sat empty when the hearing was called to order.
As expected, former White House counsel Harriet Miers has failed to appear for today’s hearing of the House Judiciary Committee’s Commercial and Administrative Law Subcommittee. That’s given C-SPAN’s camera operators an opportunity to get the poignant shots that don’t normally happen in Congressional hearings. On several occasions, they’ve cut away from the members of the subcommittee to show the chair at which Miers would be sitting had she appeared, complete with a card on the witness table that reads “Ms. Miers.”
I appreciate the fact that we took a right turn at political norms a few years ago and have been heading towards Crazy Town ever since, but it’s worth remembering that congressional subpoenas aren’t optional. They’re not suggestions. They aren’t polite invitations, requesting that one please show up. They’re orders from the legislative branch of government, backed by the rule of law.
In response, a very annoyed congressional majority on the committee initiated contempt proceedings and ruled the White House’s argument invalid.
A House panel cleared the way Thursday for contempt proceedings against former White House counsel Harriet Miers after she obeyed President Bush and skipped a hearing on the firings of federal prosecutors.
Addressing the empty chair where Miers had been subpoenaed to testify, Rep. Linda Sanchez ruled out of order Bush’s executive privilege claim that his former advisers are immune from being summoned before Congress.
The House Judiciary subcommittee that Sanchez chairs voted 7-5 to sustain her ruling. If an agreement with the White House is not reached, the full Judiciary Committee could convene hearings and vote on whether to hold Miers, Bush’s longtime friend and former Supreme Court nominee, in contempt.
Of course, the flip side is that recent events probably suggest to Miers that the president won’t let loyal Bushies suffer legal consequences for criminal behavior.
As usual, House Dems are worried about the kind of precedent that is being set for people to blow off congressional subpoenas, while House Republicans (die-hard 28 percenters) are worried about protecting a failed president.
To Democrats, the issue was simple. Miers was legally obligated to show up, and she didn’t. As Chairman John Conyers (D-MI) put it, “Are Congressional subpoenas to be honored or are they optional?”
The Republicans on the committee responded with their usual accusations of Democratic overreaching and claims that the U.S. attorney firings investigation had uncovered no evidence of wrongdoing by the administration. But ranking member Chris Cannon (R-UT) also offered a more nuanced argument against proceeding with contempt proceedings — without “evidence of criminality” on the part of the White House (he cited the example of Nixon), the House would likely lose the battle in court. And such a loss, he feared, would hurt the House’s ability to investigate the White House in the future.
Rep. Conyers (D-MI) didn’t think it was so complicated: “If we do not enforce this subpoena, no one will ever have to come before the House Judiciary Committee again.”
Rep. Tom Feeney (R-FL), who made it clear during the hearing that he’s a big fan of executive privilege, interrupted to say that this was a unique circumstance, and that it’s “not every day” that a witness produces a letter from the White House saying that he/she can’t testify. “I don’t think it’s ever happened before,” he said.
To which Conyers replied dryly, “It happened yesterday in the Senate Judiciary Committee.”
Also keep in mind, this could get tricky if/when contempt proceedings against Miers continues. Earlier this week, the White House received a dubious memo from a corrupted Justice Department, which argued that “the President and his immediate advisers are absolutely immune from testimonial compulsion by a Congressional committee.” Most qualified legal experts who aren’t on Bush’s payroll disagree and cite reality.
But more importantly, if Congress does hold Miers in contempt, the matter would go the Justice Department to uphold the law. Apparently, the Justice Department isn’t exactly on board with the idea.
Stay tuned.