In a federal courtroom on Tuesday, some of Donald Trump’s private attorneys, hired specifically to keep his personal finances secret, argued that practically all congressional oversight of presidential wrongdoing is illegal. Even if lawmakers were confronted with clear evidence of presidential corruption, Trump’s lawyers argued, Congress would have no authority to launch an investigation.
At one point, the president’s legal team suggested even the Watergate hearings on Capitol Hill may have been an illegal abuse.
Putting aside how absurd the argument was — and how likely it is to fail in court — there’s an expectation that private attorneys will sometimes have to make audacious arguments in support of a client with a weak case. It’s arguably more outrageous when the White House counsel’s office peddles similarly bizarre claims.
The White House told the House Judiciary Committee in a letter Wednesday that it will not comply with a broad range of the panel’s requests and called on it to “discontinue” its inquiry into President Donald Trump. […]
[White House counsel Pat Cipollone] homed in on a rationale that the White House and Trump’s business have made elsewhere: that Congress cannot conduct such oversight of the president unless it has a specific legislative purpose.
Cipollone’s correspondence was not subtle: the White House intends to defy all subpoenas, deny Congress witnesses, reject all requests for documents, etc. His reasoning sounded familiar.
“Congressional investigations are intended to obtain information to aid in evaluating potential legislation,” the White House counsel wrote, “not to harass political opponents or to pursue an unauthorized ‘do-over’ of exhaustive law enforcement investigations conducted by the Department of Justice.”
The use of the word “unauthorized” was of particular interest: to hear Team Trump tell it, investigations launched by the legislative branch should apparently be approved by the executive branch in order to be legitimate.
So, where does that leave us?
Between Attorney General Bill Barr, White House counsel Pat Cipollone, and the president’s private attorneys, we’re supposed to believe that Donald Trump can’t be charged with a crime, can’t be investigated by Congress, and has the authority to end any investigation of which he disapproves.
This president, in other words, should effectively be seen as immune from scrutiny.









