Liberals after June
2020 Publication of the Strzok Memorandum in the Flynn Matter: Of course, the
President should be apprised of the details of all ongoing investigations—even if
they involve the opposition party’s candidate and his confidantes. No one is
above the law! The President is supposed to comment about how to staff those investigations.
And the Vice President is supposed to put forward novel legal theories (e.g.,
the Logan Act) in order to help the investigation/prosecution
(of his future opponent). These are not disqualifying conflicts: such conflicts
are built into the Constitution. The Vice President is part of the Executive
Branch and has a role in active Justice Department investigations—even if that
involves the opposition. The unitary executive includes the Vice President. The
Unitary Executive …
To put it another way ... the active involvement of the Attorney General and Main Justice in overriding the decisions of subordinates and career civil servants is bad, particularly if all the facts are known and when it is done in public. But the Vice President’s putting forward novel legal theories to move an investigation of the opposition forward is ... perfectly normal ... especially when done in secret. Makes complete sense.
Seth
Seth Barrett Tillman, Liberals: Then and Now, New Reform Club (June 26, 2020, 5:40 AM), <https://reformclub.blogspot.com/2020/06/liberals-then-and-now.html>;
1 comment:
And how the Ambassador to the United Nations gets in the loop I'll never know...
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