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News / Opinion / Columns

Saunders: Barr has say on contempt charge

By Debra Saunders
Published: May 14, 2019, 6:01am

Can Attorney General William Barr thumb his nose at Congress and get away with it? Can the nation’s top lawman refuse to honor a House Judiciary Committee subpoena for an unredacted version of special counsel Robert Mueller’s report and not pay a penalty?

In 2012, then-Attorney General Eric Holder did just that. Holder defied a congressional subpoena to furnish documents about Operation “Fast and Furious,” a program to attempt to trace gun trafficking along the southwest border that went awry. The House held Holder in contempt, but since Holder declined to indict himself, the controversy faded. Holder resigned in 2015.

“Congress can’t enforce their own contempt charges; all they can do is give notice to the attorney general that they would like it enforced, and Eric Holder never enforced it against himself,” observed Mark Harkins, a senior fellow at the Georgetown University Government Affairs Institute. Harkins doesn’t expect Barr to charge himself, either.

Stanford law professor Michael McConnell wrote in The Washington Post about the parallels between Barr and Holder. The Obama administration said disclosing information about executive decision-making would “inhibit the candor” of officials inside the administration. An assistant attorney general falsely told Congress the Obama administration was unaware of Fast and Furious and Holder said he would provide the subpoenaed documents only if the committee agreed to close the investigation.

Next, as far as Holder was concerned, nothing happened. “The Obama administration ran out the clock. Holder never complied with the subpoena and went unpunished for the contempt,” McConnell wrote.

Barr did testify last week before the GOP-controlled Senate Judiciary Committee. He was set to appear before the Democratic-controlled House Judiciary Committee, but then the committee demanded Barr take questions from staff lawyers as well as elected members. Barr balked.

If House Democrats believe having professional lawyers ask questions “would help them do a better job at oversight, that’s Congress’ constitutional prerogative,” said Harkins. “That’s their call. The court of public opinion will ultimately decide.”

While Democrats demanded unredacted versions of the Mueller report, Barr maintained he could not legally release grand jury material, sensitive national security information, information that could affect ongoing investigations or material that violates the privacy rights of people not central to the special counsel’s investigation.

Barr, however, did forward the committee a less-redacted version of the report. Press Secretary Sarah Sanders scoffed at House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerry Nadler’s demand for an unredacted version when “not a single Democrat has yet to go read the less-redacted version of the report,” she said.

Nadler already had rejected Barr’s offer to read the less-redacted version because it applied only to a dozen House members and the deal “would not permit them to discuss it with other Members of Congress who all have top security clearances.”

The White House resisted House other subpoenas. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin again informed the House Ways and Means Committee that he would not hand over Trump’s tax returns from 2013 to 2018.

Even though Trump told reporters in April, “We’re fighting all the subpoenas,” Barr, Cipollone and Mnuchin have offered to continue negotiating with House Democrats.

To go by the Holder model, Harkins noted, both parties may find “an advantage” in letting the partisan battles percolate in the court system, a process likely to run beyond 2020. Republicans can maintain that the fight is all about Russian collusion “and there wasn’t any,” while Democrats can maintain their cause is to stop the Trump White House from impeding an investigation. Harkins added, “There will be winners and losers.”

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