interchange
Diamond Member
- Oct 10, 1999
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My own opinion on the matter is that both Democrats and Republicans share some blame for not escalating the subpoena disagreement to the court system. Republicans should have appealed instead of denying access. Democrats should have brought suit after the denial. Chances are that after all is said and done Democrats would have gotten most, but not all, of what they wanted.
In what time frame? There is a real danger that allowing this to go through the courts would take so long as to prevent a case against Trump from being heard until after the election. That doesn't seem tenable when the allegation is bribery with intent to influence the election. In the real world, many cases are brought more urgently than ideal because the suspect poses clear and present danger.
If Trump had asserted any actual possible legal defense against the subpoenas, then things may be different. But otherwise there is, based on merits, a slam dunk case of removing Trump for obstruction. I feel confident in this because I've tried repeatedly in this thread to get someone supporting Trump in any way to actually state affirmatively reasoning that, based on facts and legal principle, any other conclusion should be drawn. No one has been willing to say that. Because it's an indefensible position unless you try to divert away from facts and legal principle. But maybe you can prove me wrong.
Therefore, obstruction of basic Congressional oversight through the very mechanism the framers explicitly provided to the House to provide oversight for suspected presidential corruption to me is the priority in removing him. And courts will add nothing except an order to undo it. And then Republicans can claim no foul because they did release documents and provide testimony just like they are claiming with no quid pro quo because when the scheme was found out aid got released. No. The legal case is transparent and obvious for anyone willing to look.
Unfortunately, enough people may not be willing to look. If you have some argument that it may be strategic to wait, I'd consider that as possible, but I really think we are in this partisan mess right now because people have been trying to make decisions based on strategy when the law dictates something clearer.
