Professor
CCC,
So your saying that Bush II did not rebuke the intelligence community
[after the fact?] and he did not ignore their findings in regard to WMD’s
[before he (as President) initiated a war in reliance on their findings]? Perhaps, Bush II should have done so—before, or after, or both? What do you
think? Only about 22,000 American war dead and wounded. We, the People, elect the President, not the heads of the CIA and the other intelligence agencies.
The President is not a cipher. He is supposed to hear advice from his
security establishment and others—he is not obliged to take that advice.
If, as Bob Bauer & Andrew McCabe and others have suggested, that the
FBI/DOJ are running investigations of the President based upon his exercise of
lawful free speech, then Trump is obliged (under Article II) to take corrective
action and to supervise his subordinates.
Professor CCC, you wrote: “The silver lining, as Jack Goldsmith keeps
emphasizing, is that thus far the institutions appear to have resisted the
constant efforts to compromise their independence and professionalism.” Jack
Goldsmith has certainly emphasized that despite Trump’s efforts these
institutions are fairly robust and they have maintained a large degree of “independence.”
As to so-called “professionalism,” Jack Goldsmith has questioned
whether the FBI gets to decide the so-called “national interest” where the
President’s judgment differs with prior policy. As I understand Jack Goldsmith’s
position, he has argued that under Article II, it is the President who makes
the national security call, even where the President’s position differs with
his predecessor’s views, prior policy, and the judgment of the national
security establishment. Where the FBI runs an investigation of the President
based upon the President’s putting a new policy forward, that suggests that the
bureaucracy does not understand its legal duty. Jack Goldsmith, in effect, has
questioned the bureaucracy’s “professionalism”—albeit, he acknowledges that it
is a difficult question. If Jack Goldsmith is correct about this, then it is
hardly obvious why the President should not vent his own views to the public
about FBI/DOJ failures (in his view) to conform to extant law and legal norms. Nor does it matter if the President is correct in his assessment of such (purported) failures. In this country, as a general matter, you don’t investigate people for nothing more than airing a contentious political view in public—that standard must apply to the President above all others. After all, the President is also a party leader and elected on a party platform. The President
does not have to “shut up” just because you and others do not care for what he
has to say. One might even praise the president for his transparency. We used to call investigating people for their political speech and political associations McCarthyism. We used to think that that was wrong—but, “now all is to be changed.” Just like you and me, the President is not supposed to be investigated because some people object to what he has to say.
To put it in slightly different terms, as I think Scalia argued from
time to time, “independence” is not an unalloyed good. The more independence
the bureaucracy has, the less democratic oversight and accountability exists. (To put it another way: the less democratic oversight, the less valuable your right to vote.) As for agency independence ... the FBI and DOJ are in the Executive Branch. They are not run by independent multi-headed hydra-like commissions. Both the FBI and the DOJ have a single presidential appointment
at its helm; each is accountable to the President, and the President has a duty
to supervise that agency head and agency.
One might add, and I know no statute to the contrary, that where the FBI
and DOJ are running an illegal investigation, one contrary to presidential
policy, and established norms, then in regard to presidential subordinates in the FBI and
DOJ, their merely asserting “professionalism” and “independence” does not (without more) excuse the president from supervising his subordinates. I don’t
see any reason for that analysis to be wholly eclipsed because the target of
that investigation might be the President and/or his colleagues, family, and
friends. We see the same in regard to Article III judges under the rule of necessity. If an Article III court is the only court which can hear a class of
cases, then the court should hear the case even if that judge and all other
Article III judges face a conflict of interest. The President is charged with
supervising the FBI and DOJ—there is no one else to do so, and the FBI and DOJ
do not escape supervision where their illegality involves the president
himself.
Professor CCC: Your position is (as best as I can tell) that the Bush II
and Trump were and are obliged to take the advice and to accept the factual
findings of the national security establishment. That view has consequences.
President Bush II did not supervise the national security establishment in
regard to WMDs. The consequence: about 22,000 American dead and wounded.
Seth
CITATION:
Seth Barrett Tillman, The President, the National Security Establishment, and Conlawprof, New Reform Club (Feb. 20, 2019, 2:04 AM), <https://reformclub.blogspot.com/2019/02/the-president-national-security.html>.
My prior posts on this subject: Seth Barrett Tillman, Free Speech in Andrew McCabe’s America: A Post on Conlawprof, New Reform Club (Feb. 19, 2019, 6:54 AM), <https://reformclub.blogspot.com/2019/02/free-speech-in-andrew-mccabes-america.html>.
Seth Barrett Tillman, Bob Bauer’s Free Speech Problem and Ours, New Reform Club (July 23, 2017, 10:36 AM), http://tinyurl.com/y7ahouep.
Seth Barrett Tillman, This Is What Is Wrong With The American Judiciary, The New Reform Club (Mar. 16, 2017, 4:23 AM), http://tinyurl.com/z4q9f8v.
My prior posts on this subject: Seth Barrett Tillman, Free Speech in Andrew McCabe’s America: A Post on Conlawprof, New Reform Club (Feb. 19, 2019, 6:54 AM), <https://reformclub.blogspot.com/2019/02/free-speech-in-andrew-mccabes-america.html>.
Seth Barrett Tillman, Bob Bauer’s Free Speech Problem and Ours, New Reform Club (July 23, 2017, 10:36 AM), http://tinyurl.com/y7ahouep.
Seth Barrett Tillman, This Is What Is Wrong With The American Judiciary, The New Reform Club (Mar. 16, 2017, 4:23 AM), http://tinyurl.com/z4q9f8v.
"Trump is obliged (under Article II) to take corrective action and to supervise his subordinates."
ReplyDeleteGreat idea, Professor. Now tell Vichy Mitchy and Snake-in-the-Grassley that.
https://www.politicususa.com/2018/05/31/heres-why-trump-cant-fire-sessions-rosenstein-or-mueller.html
If Trump can't fire AND freely pick the replacements, his responsibility declines to match his authority.
Unless, of course, you're just Trump bashing.
Whatever happened to the good old resignation for difference of opinion? If you can't support your superiors, you either suck it up and act like it's your idea or you quit. If you are not the final decision maker, the choices for you are to obey or leave. Simple and honorable. There is nothing honorable about the FBI/DOJ right now.
ReplyDeleteI rarely share my story with people, not only because it put me at the lowest point ever but because it made me a person of ridicule among family and friends. I put all I had into Binary Options ($690,000) after hearing great testimonies about this new investment
ReplyDeletestrategy. I was made to believe my investment would triple, it started good and I got returns (not up to what I had invested). Gathered more and involved a couple family members, but I didn't know I was setting myself up for the kill, in less than no time all we had put ($820,000) was gone. It almost seem I had set them up, they came at me strong and hard. After searching and looking for how to make those scums pay back, I got introduced to maryshea03@gmail.com to WhatsApp her +15623847738.who helped recover about 80% of my lost funds within a month.