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Turley's Testimony on Trump's Impeachment

This document is Jonathan Turley's opening statement before the House Judiciary Committee regarding the impeachment inquiry into President Donald Trump. In his statement, Turley provides bac…

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100% found this document useful (8 votes)
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Turley's Testimony on Trump's Impeachment

This document is Jonathan Turley's opening statement before the House Judiciary Committee regarding the impeachment inquiry into President Donald Trump. In his statement, Turley provides background on his experience testifying in the Clinton impeachment and representing officials during that process. He states that while he is critical of expansions of executive power, he has not been fond of any president in his lifetime. Turley aims to have a respectful and substantive discussion of the impeachment issues despite good faith differences of opinions.

100% found this document useful (8 votes)
82K views53 pages

Turley's Testimony on Trump's Impeachment

This document is Jonathan Turley's opening statement before the House Judiciary Committee regarding the impeachment inquiry into President Donald Trump. In his statement, Turley provides bac…

Uploaded by

Fox News
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Written Statement Jonathan Turley, Shapiro Professor of Public Interest Law The George Washington University Law School
The Impeachment Inquiry Into President Donald J. Trump: The Constitutional Basis For Presidential Impeachment”
 
1100 House Office Building United States House of Representatives Committee on the Judiciary
December 4, 2019
I. INTRODUCTION
Chairman Nadler, ranking member Collins, members of the Judiciary Committee, my name is Jonathan Turley, and I am a law professor at George Washington University where I hold the J.B. and Maurice C. Shapiro Chair of Public Interest Law.
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 It is an honor to appear before you today to discuss one of the most solemn and important constitutional functions bestowed on this House by the Framers of our Constitution: the impeachment of the President of the United States. Twenty-one years ago, I sat here before you, Chairman Nadler, and other members of the Judiciary Committee to testify on the history and meaning of the constitutional impeachment standard as part of the impeachment of President William Jefferson Clinton. I never thought that I would have to appear a second time to address the same question with regard to another sitting president. Yet, here we are. Some elements are strikingly similar. The intense rancor and rage of the public debate is the same. It was an atmosphere that the Framers anticipated. Alexander Hamilton warned that charges of impeachable conduct “will seldom fail to agitate the passions of the whole community, and to divide it into parties more or less friendly or inimical to the accused.”
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 As with the Clinton impeachment, the Trump impeachment has again proven Hamilton’s words to be prophetic. The stifling intolerance for opposing views is the same. As was the case two decades ago, it is a perilous environment for a legal scholar who wants to
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 I appear today in my academic capacity to present views founded in prior academic work on impeachment and the separation of powers. My testimony does not reflect the views or approval of CBS News, the BBC, or the newspapers for which I write as a columnist. My testimony was written exclusively by myself with editing assistance from  Nicholas Contarino, Andrew Hile, Thomas Huff, and Seth Tate.
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 A
LEXANDER
H
AMILTON
,
 
F
EDERALIST
 N
O
.
 
65 (1788),
reprinted in
 T
HE
F
EDERALIST
P
APERS
 396, 396-97 (Clinton Rossiter ed., 1961).
 
 2 explore the technical and arcane issues normally involved in an academic examination of a legal standard ratified 234 years ago. In truth, the Clinton impeachment hearing proved to be an exception to the tenor of the overall public debate. The testimony from witnesses, ranging from Arthur Schlesinger Jr. to Laurence Tribe to Cass Sunstein, contained divergent views and disciplines. Yet the hearing remained respectful and substantive as we all grappled with this difficult matter. I appear today in the hope that we can achieve that same objective of civil and meaningful discourse despite our good-faith differences on the impeachment standard and its application to the conduct of President Donald J. Trump. I have spent decades writing about impeachment
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 and presidential powers
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 as an academic and as a legal commentator. My academic work reflects the bias of a Madisonian scholar. I tend to favor Congress in disputes with the Executive Branch and I have been critical of the sweeping claims of presidential power and privileges made by modern Administrations. My prior testimony mirrors my criticism of the expansion of executive powers and privileges.
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 In truth, I have not held much fondness for any
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See, e.g 
., Jonathan Turley,
"From Pillar to Post": The Prosecution of Sitting Presidents
, 37 A
M
.
 
C
RIM
.
 
L.
 
EV
. 1049 (2000); Jonathan Turley,
Senate Trials and Factional  Disputes: Impeachment as a Madisonian Device
, 49 D
UKE
L.J. 1 (1999); Jonathan Turley,
The "Executive Function" Theory, the Hamilton Affair and Other Constitutional  Mythologies
, 77 N.C.
 
L.
 
EV
. 1791 (1999); Symposium, Jonathan Turley,
Congress as Grand Jury: The Role of the House of Representatives in the Impeachment of an  American President 
, 67 G
EO
.
 
W
ASH
.
 
L.
 
EV
. 735 (1999); Symposium, Jonathan Turley,
 Reflections on Murder. Misdemeanors. and Madison
, 28 H
OFSTRA
L.
 
EV
. 439 (1999).
4
 
See, e.g 
., Jonathan Turley,
 A Fox In The Hedges: Vermeule’s Optimizing Constitutionalism For A Suboptimal World 
, 82 U.
 
C
HI
.
 
L.
 
EV
. 517 (2015); Jonathan Turley,
 Madisonian Tectonics: How Function Follows Form in Constitutional and  Architectural Interpretation
, 83 G
EO
.
 
W
ASH
.
 
L.
 
EV
. 305 (2015); Jonathan Turley,
 Recess Appointments in the Age of Regulation
, 93 B.U.
 
L.
 
EV
. 1523 (2013); Jonathan Turley,
 Presidential Records and Popular Government: The Convergence of Constitutional and Property Theory in Claims of Control and Ownership of Presidential  Records
, 88 C
ORNELL
L.
 
EV
. 651 (2003); Jonathan Turley,
The Military Pocket  Republic,
 97 N
W
.
 
L.
 
EV
. 1 (2002); Jonathan Turley,
Tribunals and Tribulations: The  Antithetical Elements of the Military Justice System in a Madisonian Democracy,
 70 G
EO
.
 
W
ASH
.
 
L.
 
EV
. 649 (2002).
5
 
See
 United States House of Representatives, Committee on the Judiciary, “Executive Privilege and Congressional Oversight,” May 15, 2019 (testimony of Professor Jonathan Turley); United States House of Representatives, House Judiciary Committee, Subcommittee on the Constitution, Civil Rights, and Civil Liberties,
The National  Emergencies Act of 1976 
, Feb. 28, 2019 (testimony of Professor Jonathan Turley); United States Senate, Committee on the Judiciary,
The Confirmation of William Pelham  Barr As Attorney General of the United States Supreme Court 
, Jan. 16, 2019 (testimony of Professor Jonathan Turley); United States Senate, Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, Subcommittee on Federal Spending Oversight and Emergency Management, “
War Powers and the Effects of Unauthorized Military
 
 3  president in my lifetime. Indeed, the last president whose executive philosophy I consistently admired was James Madison. In addition to my academic work, I am a practicing criminal defense lawyer. Among my past cases, I represented the United States House of Representatives as lead counsel challenging payments made under the Affordable Care Act without congressional authorization. I also served as the last lead defense counsel in an impeachment trial in the Senate. With my co-lead counsel Daniel Schwartz, I argued the case on behalf of federal  judge Thomas Porteous. (My opposing lead counsel for the House managers was Adam Schiff). In addition to my testimony with other constitutional scholars at the Clinton impeachment hearings, I also represented former Attorneys General during the Clinton impeachment litigation over privilege disputes triggered by the investigation of Independent Counsel Ken Starr. I also served as lead counsel in a bill of attainder case, the sister of impeachment that will be discussed below.
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 Engagements on Federal Spending 
”, June 6, 2018 (testimony of Professor Jonathan Turley); United States Senate,
Confirmation Hearing For Judge Neil M. Gorsuch To Be  Associate Justice of the United States
, United States Senate Committee on the Judiciary, Mar. 21, 2017 (testimony of Professor Jonathan Turley); United States House of Representatives, House Committee on Science, Space, and Technology, “
 Affirming Congress' Constitutional Oversight Responsibilities: Subpoena Authority and Recourse  for Failure to Comply with Lawfully Issued Subpoenas
,” Sept. 14, 2016 (testimony and  prepared statement of Jonathan Turley); United States House of Representatives, House Judiciary Committee, Regulatory Reform, Commercial and Antitrust Law,
“Examining The Allegations of Misconduct of IRS Commissioner John Koskinen”
June 22, 2016 (testimony and prepared statement of Jonathan Turley); United States Senate, Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, “
The Administrative State: An Examination of Federal Rulemaking,
” Apr. 20, 2016 (testimony and prepared statement of Jonathan Turley); United States House of Representatives, House Judiciary Committee, Regulatory Reform, Commercial and Antitrust Law, “
The Chevron  Doctrine: Constitutional and Statutory Questions in Judicial Deference to Agencies
,” Mar. 15, 2016 (testimony and prepared statement of Jonathan Turley);
 Authorization to  Initiate Litigation for Actions by the President Inconsistent with His Duties Under the Constitution of the United States: Hearing Before the H. Comm. on Rules
, 113th Cong. (2014) (prepared statement of Jonathan Turley, Shapiro Professor of Public Interest Law);
 Enforcing 
 
The President’s Constitutional Duty to Faithfully Execute the Laws:  Hearing Before the H. Comm. on the Judiciary
, 113th Cong. 30–47 (2014) (testimony and prepared statement of Jonathan Turley) (discussing nonenforcement issues and the rise of the Fourth Branch);
 Executive Overreach: The President’s Unprecedented “Recess” Appointments: Hearing Before the H. Comm. on the Judiciary
, 112th Cong. 35–57 (2012) (prepared statement of Jonathan Turley);
 see also
 
Confirmation Hearing  for Attorney General Nominee Loretta Lynch: Hearing Before the S. Comm. on the  Judiciary
, 114th Cong. (2015) (prepared statement of Jonathan Turley). Parts of my testimony today is taken from this prior work.
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 Foretich v. United States,
 
351 F.3d 1198 (D.C. Cir. 2003).
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