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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Trump, Democrats cross swords over powers

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Congressional Democrats and President Donald Trump are locked in a constitutional showdown over their powers to investigate him, exchanging threats that present risks for both sides as they head into the 2020 election.


In a clash over the balance of power between the government’s legislative and executive branches, the Trump administration is stonewalling congressional investigators and asserting that it is within its rights to do so. On Capitol Hill, House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerrold Nadler, one of several senior Democrats leading probes of Trump, his presidency and his businesses, issued a dire warning: “The challenge we face is that the president of the United States wants desperately to prevent Congress, a co-equal branch of government, from providing any check


whatsoever on even his most reckless decisions,” Nadler said in a hearing on Thursday.


“The very system of government in the United States, the system of limited power, the system of not


having a president as a dictator is very much at stake.”


His remarks came after Attorney General William Barr, a Trump appointee, refused to attend the same hearing before Nadler’s committee, which is examining Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation of Russian interference in


the 2016 election and Trump’s efforts to stifle the probe.


In an unprecedented approach, Trump in recent days has filed lawsuits meant to block congressional subpoenas that were sent to two banks and an accounting firm that have worked with his businesses, which he did not divest when he took office. The subpoenas seek access to past financial records for Trump.


A businessman-turned-politician, Trump also still refuses to disclose any of his annual tax returns, rejecting decades of practice by recent presidents.


Standing by their president, Republicans in Congress dismissed as hollow Nadler’s rhetoric about Trump’s defiance and played down Barr’s refusal to attend the House hearing.


The Republicans complained that Nadler wanted committee staff lawyers to be able to question Barr, a departure from the standard hearing format where lawmakers do the questioning.


They stressed Barr’s readiness to defend his handling of the Mueller report before a Republican-controlled Senate panel on the day before he skipped the House hearing.


On Nadler’s comments, Republican Representative Tom Cole said, “It’s over the top. The attorney general showed up before the Senate committee and took every question.”


The partisan shouting match in Washington is intensifying as a platoon of Democratic presidential hopefuls hit the campaign trail, with Trump lobbing Twitter insults at the front-runners.


Both sides run risks in ramping up their confrontation. The Democrats could turn off voters if they push too hard to investigate, and perhaps ultimately try to impeach Trump, allowing him to play the victim, a role he excels in.


Former Vice President Joe Biden, the leading Democrat in opinion polls, said last week that Trump’s stonewalling left no alternative but impeachment, which other Democrats have urged.


A Reuters/Ipsos opinion poll showed the public split evenly over impeachment, with 40 per cent in favor and 42 per cent against it. On the other hand, Trump’s behaviour may already be worrying Americans. A recent Reuters/Ipsos poll showed Trump with a 37 per cent approval rating after the Mueller report’s release, his lowest of the year. — Reuters


David Morgan


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