Los Angeles Times - 26.11.2019

(Nancy Kaufman) #1

LATIMES.COM TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 2019A


repetition” by lawyers for the
current and previous admin-
istrations, she said.
“Stated simply, the pri-
mary takeaway from the
past 250 years of recorded
American history is that
presidents are not kings,”
she wrote.
The ruling, if upheld on
appeal, could affect a wide
swath of senior officials. In
addition to McGahn, House
Democrats would like to ob-
tain testimony from acting
White House Chief of Staff
Mick Mulvaney and former
national security advisor
John Bolton, among others.
While Jackson’s ruling
doesn’t definitely answer the
question of whether those
other officials must testify,
lawyers for the House are
certain to cite it as a strong
precedent. If the case
reaches the Supreme Court
while Trump’s impeach-
ment is still pending, it could
have a major effect on any
impeachment trial in the
Senate.
The judge, who was ap-
pointed by former President
Obama, agreed there may
be limits on what a White
House official may disclose
or discuss before Congress.
If, for example, the president
invoked executive privilege
over certain topics, a subor-
dinate might be barred from
testifying about those.
But no such concern jus-
tifies ignoring or defying a
subpoena entirely, she con-
cluded.
“Compulsory appear-
ance by dint of a subpoena is
a legal construct, not a polit-
ical one, and per the Consti-
tution, no one is above the
law,” she wrote. “However
busy or essential a presi-
dential aide might be, and
whatever their proximity to
sensitive domestic and na-
tional security projects, the
president does not have the
power to excuse him or her
from taking an action that
the law requires.”
House Judiciary Com-


mittee Chairman Rep. Jer-
rold Nadler (D-N.Y.) said in a
statement that “now that
the court has ruled,” he ex-
pected McGahn “to follow
his legal obligations and
promptly appear before the
committee.”
Rep. Adam B. Schiff (D-
Burbank), chairman of the
House Intelligence Commit-
tee, similarly called the rul-
ing a “significant victory.”
“The witnesses who have
defied Congress at the be-
hest of the president will
have to decide whether their
duty is to the country, or to a
president who believes that
he is above the law,” Schiff
said.
McGahn’s attorney,
William Burck, said his cli-
ent would testify unless the

judge’s order is stayed on ap-
peal.
A Justice Department
spokeswoman said the ad-
ministration would appeal
the ruling.
The White House said in
a statement that the deci-
sion “contradicts long-
standing legal precedent es-
tablished by administra-
tions of both political
parties. We will appeal and
are confident that the im-
portant constitutional prin-
ciple advanced by the ad-
ministration will be vindi-
cated.”
Ordinarily, appeals
courts can take months to
consider a case, but given
the pressing nature of the
current impeachment pro-
ceedings, the judicial proc-

ess could move much more
quickly.
One key question will be
whether the judge or the U.S.
Court of Appeals for the Dis-
trict of Columbia Circuit will
grant a stay to put Monday’s
ruling on hold at least tem-
porarily while that appeal
moves forward.
The appeals court may
not be favorable terrain for
Trump.
A majority of the judges
are Democratic appointees.
In recent weeks, those
judges have ruled that the
president’s accountants
may be required to turn over
his tax returns and financial
records to a House oversight
committee. Trump’s lawyers
are now urging the Supreme
Court to block that decision.

The Judiciary Commit-
tee has been eager to ques-
tion McGahn about whether
Trump obstructed Mueller’s
investigation, including
whether the president may
have lied in written answers
that he furnished to the spe-
cial counsel.
The committee has also
been looking at possible ef-
forts by Trump to obstruct
justice. According to
Mueller’s report, Trump di-
rected McGahn to tell the
Justice Department to fire
Mueller. McGahn refused to
do so, and when Trump’s de-
mand became public, the
president told McGahn to lie
about what Trump had
asked him to do, the report
said.
In his report, Mueller de-

clined to say whether the
president could be charged
with obstruction of justice,
in part because of a Justice
Department ruling that sit-
ting presidents can’t be in-
dicted. But the Judiciary
Committee could include at-
tempts to obstruct justice as
a count in an impeachment
resolution.
In August, the committee
filed suit seeking an order
that would compel McGahn
to testify. McGahn left the
White House in October of
last year and returned to the
Jones Day law firm.
The legal dispute over the
subpoena turned into a bat-
tle over history and the Con-
stitution.
Two weeks ago, Atty.
Gen. William Barr said the
framers of the Constitution
sought to create a strong
and independent executive.
He described the presidency
as “one of the most success-
ful features of the Constitu-
tion in protecting the liber-
ties of the American people.”
“Unfortunately, over the
past several decades, we
have seen steady encroach-
ment on presidential au-
thority by other branches of
government,” he said, refer-
ring to Congress and the ju-
diciary.
By contrast, Judge Jack-
son said the Constitution
was designed to put limits
on the president’s power.
“The Constitution vests
the legislature with the
power to investigate abuses
of official authority — when
necessary to hold govern-
ment officials, up to and in-
cluding the president, ac-
countable,” she wrote.
“What is missing from the
Constitution’s framework as
the framers envisioned it is
the president’s purported
power to kneecap House in-
vestigations of executive
branch operations by de-
manding that his senior-lev-
el aides breach their legal
duty to respond to com-
pelled congressional proc-
ess.”

Ruling is a win for House Democrats


[McGahn,from A1]


THEN-WHITE HOUSECounsel Donald McGahn, right, at a Cabinet meeting with President Trump in 2018.

Chip SomodevillaGetty Images

WASHINGTON —


Michael R. Bloomberg held
his first presidential cam-
paign event Monday, and if it
sets the pattern for the rest,
don’t expect to see the newly
minted candidate in public
very much.
Bloomberg visited a
diner in Norfolk, Va., ordered
a cup of decaf coffee with
milk while cameras whirred,
then held a five-minute
question and answer session
with reporters before head-
ing back behind closed
doors.
The former New York
mayor never put much stock
in retail politics — his huge
fortune allowed him to cam-
paign heavily on television
ads, and he made clear that
he expects to do that again.
His plan to forgo raising
money from any donors —
including the hundreds of
thousands of small donors
fueling rival campaigns —
will cost him considerable
exposure. Candidates who
don’t raise money from indi-
vidual donors don’t qualify
for the televised candidate
debates.
But the 77-year-old me-
dia billionaire said being ex-
cluded from the debates
didn’t bother him.
His plan to reach voters
through tens of millions of
dollars in ads will effectively
“explain what I’ve done and
what I would do and give
them some comfort that be-
cause of what I have done in
the past, I would deliver in
the future,” he said. “They
are not just empty promises.
If you can say that in a de-
bate, OK. It is hard to do
that. I think I would be much
better off talking to the pub-
lic.”
As for the charge from ri-
val candidates that he is try-
ing to buy the nomination —
an accusation repeated on
the campaign trail Monday
— Bloomberg brushed it
aside, saying, “I am going to
make my case and let the
voters, who are plenty
smart, make their choice.”


Taking no donations
means he can’t be bought, he
said, adding that he will take
a salary of $1-per-year if
elected.
Bloomberg said he chose
Norfolk for his campaign
kickoff because it was in Vir-
ginia, where his money
helped Democrats take con-
trol of both houses of the
state Legislature in this
month’s election.
“Southeast Virginia
proves that with the right
candidate, we can turn areas
from red to blue,”
Bloomberg said. “We need to
do that all across this coun-
try.”
While that may be true,
the path he’s chosen in-
volves a big gamble.
Bloomberg’s initial $37-mil-
lion ad buy eclipses the en-
tire advertising budget of
other candidates who have

been in the race for many
months. Yet America has a
long history of wealthy can-
didates whose outsized
spending produced a paltry
return in voter support.
There is one in the Demo-
cratic presidential field al-
ready: California billionaire
Tom Steyer is floundering in
the polls despite a hefty in-
vestment in his own presi-
dential bid. And Steyer is ac-
tually on the debate stage.
Bloomberg said that a
presidential bid is his call-
ing, even at a time when a
glut of candidates has left
many Democratic voters
wishing for fewer choices,
not more.
He avoided explicitly
declaring his rivals aren’t up
to the job, but echoed the
anxieties about the field
that have swirled among
some party establishment
figures.
“There is a greater risk of
having Donald Trump re-
elected than there was be-
fore,” Bloomberg said. “I
looked in the mirror and
said, ‘I just cannot let this
happen.’ ”
As expected, Bloomberg
positioned himself as a cen-
trist, promising, for exam-

ple, affordable healthcare
for everyone, but not an end
to private insurance. His re-
marks sounded similar to
those of former Vice Presi-
dent Joe Biden, who contin-
ues to lead the race in most
national polls but whose
stumbles have potentially
left an opening for a candi-
date like Bloomberg.
Bloomberg’s billions
both open his path to the
nomination and complicate
it. His rivals are gaining trac-
tion by holding out wealthy
individuals like him as a
symbol of the country’s
deepening economic in-
equality.
Some, notably Sens. Eliz-
abeth Warren and Bernie
Sanders, are calling for steep
wealth taxes that would cost
Bloomberg a not-insignifi-
cant chunk of his fortune.
The former mayor said in
his launch video Sunday and
again in Norfolk that he too
believes people like him
should be taxed more. He
did not specify how much.
He also moved to miti-
gate the political harm
caused by the “stop and
frisk” police tactics he
backed as mayor. Those
policies are deeply unpopu-

lar with many African
American voters, who are
crucial to winning the
Democratic nomination.
Bloomberg said he
“worked very hard to make
sure we would tackle dis-
crimination wherever I saw
it. New York City has a
record that is not perfect,
but I think we should be
proud of in terms of making
it a city open to everyone.”
“I worked hard in minor-
ity communities, brought
the crime rate down and
saved an awful lot of lives,”
he said.
There was other major
baggage confronting Bloom-
berg as he launched his run:
the Bloomberg media em-
pire owned by the billionaire,
which reports extensively on
presidential politics. Editor
in chief John Micklethwait
told journalists there on
Sunday that they would not
be doing any investigations
into Bloomberg or his
Democratic rivals, a deci-
sion that was not received
well in journalism circles.
“It is truly staggering
that any editor would put
their name on a memo that
bars an army of unbelievably
talented reporters and edi-
tors from covering massive,
crucial aspects of one of the
defining elections of our
time,” tweeted Megan Mur-
phy, the former Washington
bureau chief at the com-
pany. “Staggering.”
On Monday, Bloomberg
also stepped down from his
post as the United Nations’
special envoy for climate ac-
tion. He’s done work with
the U.N. on climate change
since 2014.
At his news conference,
the candidate talked about
all the things he has done in
government and political
advocacy in making the case
that “more than plans, I offer
the leadership to turn plans
into reality.”
But he also worked to
project some humility.
Asked whether any big
Democratic power brokers
— such as former President
Obama — had called to offer
guidance, Bloomberg de-
clined to name names but
did say he received “some
very flattering calls.”
“I didn’t grow up in a
world where I knew famous
people,” he said.
“When you get a call from
one of them, I still pinch my-
self a little.”

Bloomberg signals unorthodox strategy


Latest Democratic


candidate will not be


part of the debates,


but will focus on ads


to persuade voters.


By Evan Halper


MICHAEL R. BLOOMBERG speaks with Virginia delegate-elect Nancy Guy as
he kicked off his bid for the Democratic nomination with retail-style politicking.

Bill TiernanAssociated Press

■■■ ELECTION 2020■■■


FORT LAUDERDALE,


Fla. — A federal judge on
Monday sentenced a Chi-
nese businesswoman to
eight months in prison for
trespassing at President
Trump’s Mar-a-Lago club
and lying to Secret Service
agents.
U.S. District Judge Roy
Altman also ordered that 33-
year-old Yujing Zhang be
turned over to immigration
officials for deportation up-
on her release.
Because she received
nearly eight months’ credit
for being jailed since her ar-
rest March 30, she has about
a week more to serve.
Sentencing guidelines
called for a sentence of zero
to six months, but the law al-
lowed for up to six years.
Altman said trespassing
on a government property,
particularly one where the
president is staying, is a “se-
rious offense.” He also said
“the evidence was over-
whelming” that Zhang had
lied to Secret Service agents.
Zhang told Altman she
went to Mar-a-Lago “to
meet the president and fam-
ily and just make friends.”
When an incredulous Alt-
man questioned her about
whether she thought she
could really meet the
Trumps, Zhang laughed
loudly and said she hoped to
meet other people too.
Assistant U.S. Atty.
Rolando Garcia cited
Zhang’s falsehoods in argu-
ing for an 18-month sen-
tence, saying Zhang “lied to
everybody” to get into Mar-
a-Lago, including Secret
Service agents, the club’s re-
ceptionist and even her taxi
driver.
When Zhang was ar-
rested, she was carrying four
cellphones, a computer and
an external hard drive, and
her hotel room contained
more electronics. That led to
speculation she might be a
spy, but she was never
charged with espionage.

Intruder


at Trump


resort is


sentenced


Woman trespassed at
Mar-a-Lago and lied

to the Secret Service.


associated press

A disservice to
American voters

Bloomberg News is
wrong to limit investiga-
tive work as its boss joins
the race, Michael Hiltzik
writes. BUSINESS, C
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