Nội bộ chính trị Mỹ chia rẽ - "khuyết điểm chết người" của hệ thống chính trị Mỹ
Subject: "khuyết_điểm_ chết_người", fatalflaw, của hệ_thống chính_trị Mỹ.
From: Mike Wilson
Date: Sun, May 05, 2019 6:46 am
Nội bộ chính trị Mỹ chia rẽ:
Không đảng nào muốn đảng kia chiếm ưu thế! Trump công khai thách thức Quốc Hội, coi chẳng ra gì !
Quốc Hội không thể làm hiệu quả vai trò giám sát Trump và đồng bọn
- biện pháp nào cũng bị giới hạn, thậm chí còn bị thưa kiện !
Trump cấm mọi người làm chứng trước Quốc Hội, y sẽ "cù nhầy" dấu tất mọi chứng tích thuế và tài chánh, ... cho đến sau năm 2020 - khi y hi vọng tái đắc cử TT !
Người Mỹ gọi tình trạng này là "stalemate", "deadlock" - đôi bên "bế tắc", "tiến thoái lưỡng nan" ...
Trump lạm dụng tối đa quyền TT và cho thấy "khuyết điểm chết người", fatal flaw, của hệ thống chính trị Mỹ .
As Trump vows subpoena fights, Democrats weigh their options
MARY CLARE JALONICK
,Associated Press
Democratic leaders say they will have to fight on multiple fronts to obtain documents and witness interviews as the Trump administration stonewalls them. The White House is attempting to block witness interviews as well as efforts to obtain Trump’s tax returns and financial records, among other congressional requests.
"We will cross that bridge when we come to it," said House Oversight and Reform Committee Chairman Elijah Cummings, who is trying to negotiate documents and witness interviews. "But I promise you we will cross it."
A look at Democrats’ options:
___
CRIMINAL CONTEMPT REFERRAL
A criminal referral is the most common way to hold officials in contempt, and is usually the first recourse for congressional committees when a witness defies a subpoena or refuses to provide documents. But it has been largely ineffective and difficult to enforce in recent years.
A person can be held in contempt of Congress by a vote of the full House. The contempt resolution is then referred to the U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia, a Justice Department official who is likely to defend the administration’s interests. The U.S. attorney can decline to prosecute, and the contempt resolution reaches a dead end.
The current U.S. attorney in Washington, Jessie Liu, was nominated by Trump.
___
CIVIL LITIGATION
House Democrats could also file civil lawsuits against the administration — an option that has a greater chance for success, but that can take months or years to play out. Congressional Republicans filed a lawsuit against President Barack Obama’s attorney general, Eric Holder, in 2012, and the case was still pending when Obama left office in 2017.
Trump has jump-started some of the litigation on his own, with his business suing Cummings to block a subpoena that seeks years of the president’s financial records. Trump, his business and family also filed a lawsuit on Monday against Deutsche Bank and Capital One in an attempt to block congressional subpoenas seeking their banking and financial records.
___
ARREST OR IMPRISONMENT
The least likely option. Known as inherent contempt, Congress can try witnesses and even imprison them in the Capitol.
This process was often used in the country’s early years but hasn’t been employed in almost a century.
While Democrats have vowed to use all of the available legal tools, leaders have shown little interest in going that far.
___
HEFTY FINES
While Democrats are unlikely to throw potential witnesses in a Capitol jail, they may find other ways to bring back the idea of Congress taking charge.
One of these could be fines. One Democratic member of the Oversight panel, Virginia Rep. Gerry Connolly, suggested last week on CNN that an idea up for discussion is fines of $25,000 a day for witnesses who don’t comply.
The fines could be viewed as a way to enforce Congress’ power of inherent contempt, but avoiding having to put someone in prison.
___
CUTTING FUNDING
House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff, D-Calif., suggested at a Washington Post event Tuesday that one way to hold government witnesses accountable would be to threaten their budgets. He said committees could "fence funding" until requests were satisfied.
"Congress will have to figure out how can we use our financial power, how can we use our other powers, to make sure we get answers to these legitimate questions," Schiff said.
But the chairwoman of the House Appropriations Committee, New York Rep. Nita Lowey, seemed reluctant when asked earlier this month if she would consider cutting dollars for the Justice Department over full access to special counsel Robert Mueller’s report.
"The budget that I oversee and my colleagues oversee is for the American people," said Lowey, adding that she wanted to make sure that "cops are on the street" and law enforcement is functioning.
___
POLITICAL PRESSURE
Whatever happens in court, there is one power that Congress will always have — exerting political pressure on those who defy them.
Lawmakers can do this by finding related witnesses who may have related information, and by publicly criticizing the witnesses or entities who are denying them information. This can be particularly effective with people who no longer work for the Trump administration and want to protect themselves from legal fees and bad publicity.
"In the end it always comes down to the same thing — can you marshal the political pressure?" says Andrew Herman, a lawyer with the firm Miller Chevalier in Washington who has worked extensively with Congress.
_____________ COMMENTS :
4 days ago
I don’t think there is a capitol jail, although there surely is a capital jail (in Washington, DC).
3 days ago
Congress is in a unique situation. No administration has ever been so openly defiant towards congressional oversight. Whatever Congress decide to do, they’d better do it soon. I like the suggestion of fining witnesses ($25,000 a day) who defy a subpoena.
3 days ago
Trump and his minions are thumbing their noses at Congress, the Constitution, and the law of the land. They are going to ignore legal subpoenas (though the almighty one trump says it is his right -- and the parrots trumpists start repeating it) and the only real solution is to be sure that Trump is voted out of office in 2020.
4 days ago
Imprisonment hasn’t been used in nearly a century....BUT, this country has NEVER seen this level of disregard for oversight, ethics, and the rule of law...not to mention our own constitution! Drastic times call for drastic measures. YOU NEED TO ACT ACCORDINGLY. Toss them in prison or continue on with this clown show, along with its stonewalling, hiding, and endless excuses and complaining.
5 days ago
“What do you have to lose,” President Limp Mushroom? You’re innocent, remember? But you act sooooooooo guilty
(why do you need to hide EVERYTHING ???).
3 days ago
Contempt of Congress is a misdemeanor. A traffic ticket. Trump has his plants and sycophants all over the Justice Department. Barr was put in charge of the JD (Justice Department) because he didn’t think Trump should be charged with a crime. House can impeach Trump all day butthe GOP-led Senate will never find him guilty That’s pretty much the end game for the Dems in Congress. A shame, but Trump has mangled the Federal Government.
________
WASHINGTON (AP) — They’re talking at the Capitol about jailing people. Imposing steep fines. All sorts of extrao...
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