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We Wouldn’t Have Let Obama Get Away With This
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May 9, 2019 19:30:15   #
slatten49 Loc: Lake Whitney, Texas
 
PeterS wrote:
They were? And just who was that?

The earliest member of Congress that I am aware of was Rep. Al Green of Texas....

https://www.cnn.com/2017/05/17/politics/al-green-impeachment-call/index.html

Reply
May 9, 2019 19:55:12   #
Carol Kelly
 
Liberty Tree wrote:
Democrats do not care about the Constitution, but only in getting Trump. There is a difference in a legitimate inquiry and in launching investigations in all direction in the hopes of finding something, anything yo get somebody.


Amen

Reply
May 9, 2019 20:35:11   #
tommsteyer
 
Carol Kelly wrote:
Are you kidding me? Obama got away with attempted murder. The victim was to have been AMERICA.


Reporters barely touched Obama compared to the bloodletting vendetta to punish Trump for winning. Obama is nigh invisible.
He couldn't stand up to 5% of the Media bashing Trump gets and has been getting since before he was sworn in.

Reply
 
 
May 9, 2019 21:32:38   #
Lonewolf
 
archie bunker wrote:
I'm done with it all. Over it. Both political parties are there for v**es, and are both dirty, and hypocritical.
I have a life to live, and it is meaningless to any of these clowns (being nice here).

People getting all worked up over this s**t is all they're after. I ain't doing it no more. I need to sharpen my lawnmower blade for the unlikely day that it'll ever dry up enough for me to use it.
I also have to go get a haircut, and horse feed, and possibly a new phone that'll work better for my work Saturday.

I have things to do other than read this bulls**t anymore.
It's all a show. A game. I'm not playing anymore.
I'm done with it all. Over it. Both political part... (show quote)


I certainly agree with everything you posted good luck

Reply
May 9, 2019 21:51:14   #
Fodaoson Loc: South Texas
 
slatten49 wrote:
Kurt Bardella worked for Republicans on the House Oversight Committee back when the GOP cared about keeping the president in check.

Apr 29, 2019, by Kurt Bardella...Senior adviser for the House Oversight and Reform Committee from 2009 to 2013

President Donald Trump last Tuesday lamented on Twitter that “in the ‘old days’ if you were President and you had a good economy, you were basically immune from criticism.” The next day, he complained that Congress members “only want to continue the Witch Hunt, which I have already won.” In an interview with The Washington Post, Trump said, “There is no reason to go any further, and especially in Congress where it’s very partisan—obviously very partisan … I don’t want people testifying to a party, because that is what they’re doing if they do this.” Meanwhile, Trump has filed a lawsuit to avoid handing over his tax returns to the House.

Trump’s defiance of Congress is outrageous and dangerous. It also exposes Republicans’ hypocrisy. There is a world of difference between how Republicans viewed oversight when Barack Obama was president and their support of Trump’s obstruction. I know, because for five years I worked for Republicans on the House Oversight and Reform Committee.

In a 1957 Supreme Court ruling, Chief Justice Earl Warren wrote, “The power of Congress to conduct investigations is inherent in the legislative process. That power is broad … It comprehends probes into departments of the federal government to expose corruption, inefficiency, or waste.”

During my time on Oversight, the chief justice’s words were often cited as justification for our vigorous supervision of the Obama administration. Led by Representative Darrell Issa, my former boss, Republicans issued more than 100 subpoenas, held Attorney General Eric Holder in contempt of Congress, created a select committee to investigate Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s handling of the B******i crisis, and filed a lawsuit in federal court challenging President Obama’s use of executive privilege.

In 2011, we sent a letter to Secretary Clinton that stated: “The Committee on Oversight and Government Reform is the principal oversight committee of the House of Representatives and may at ‘any time’ investigate ‘any matter’ as set forth in House Rule X.”

Also in 2011, when we suspected an effort to intimidate a witness called to testify at a hearing, Issa sent a letter warning the Obama administration that the “inappropriate effort to intimidate” and “discourage” someone from testifying before Congress was “an unlawful attempt to interfere with a Congressional inquiry.”

Yet when Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin last week ignored a deadline to produce Trump’s tax returns, House Republicans refused to speak out against this blatant disregard for legislative authority.
And Republicans did nothing when the White House last week instructed an administration official to ignore a subpoena and not testify at a hearing regarding White House security-clearance procedures.

Contrast that with the time an IRS official refused to answer questions from Oversight Republicans—they held that official in contempt of Congress. During the contempt proceeding, Representative Jim Jordan, now the ranking Republican on the Oversight Committee, justified his v**e in favor of contempt by saying, “The only remedy we have to get to the t***h is to use every tool at our disposal” to get that official to “testify and answer the questions. That is the only remedy we have. The only route to the t***h is through the House of Representatives.”

President Trump and Republicans complain about the pace of oversight; Trump declared on Twitter on Wednesday that “there has NEVER been a President who has been more t***sparent.” But the simple t***h is that this White House is more obstructionist than the Obama White House, or any other White House, and Republicans are enabling this behavior.

During the two years that Trump’s presidency overlapped with the Republican majority in the House, Republicans issued a total of zero subpoenas to the Trump administration. To date, Trump has refused to cooperate with subpoenas issued by congressional Democrats.

Trump’s desire to shield his tax returns may provoke a constitutional standoff with Congress. He wants to slow the pace of oversight as much as possible, which means a long and tedious legal battle that will likely be decided by the Supreme Court. Trump is betting that the American people simply do not care whether or not he cooperates with congressional investigations. He’s betting that they do not have the attention span to follow a long court battle about constitutional authority. Trump believes that his stranglehold on the GOP is so tight that his f**grant disregard for checks and balances won’t matter to the Republican base or Republican elected officials. He might be right.

The entire point of having separate but equal branches of government was to create protections against the kind of tyranny and absolute rule that was common in Europe. If Trump can simply ignore Congress and act unilaterally without consequence, then he is America’s first dictator.

This fight is bigger than one hearing or one investigation or one subpoena. It is a struggle to preserve the foundation of our republic. Republicans won’t rise to the challenge. Which means it’s up to Democrats to keep Trump in check, and to support the Constitution. They have to learn to confront Trump as aggressively as we confronted Obama.
Kurt Bardella worked for Republicans on the House ... (show quote)


There is little difference between the Republican and Democratic parties. Both seek power not what is best for the nation. That is one reason I am a centrist Independent. I usually v**e against the incumbent from President down to local offices.

Reply
May 9, 2019 22:44:43   #
Wolf counselor Loc: Heart of Texas
 
slatten49 wrote:
Kurt Bardella worked for Republicans on the House Oversight Committee back when the GOP cared about keeping the president in check.

Apr 29, 2019, by Kurt Bardella...Senior adviser for the House Oversight and Reform Committee from 2009 to 2013

President Donald Trump last Tuesday lamented on Twitter that “in the ‘old days’ if you were President and you had a good economy, you were basically immune from criticism.” The next day, he complained that Congress members “only want to continue the Witch Hunt, which I have already won.” In an interview with The Washington Post, Trump said, “There is no reason to go any further, and especially in Congress where it’s very partisan—obviously very partisan … I don’t want people testifying to a party, because that is what they’re doing if they do this.” Meanwhile, Trump has filed a lawsuit to avoid handing over his tax returns to the House.

Trump’s defiance of Congress is outrageous and dangerous. It also exposes Republicans’ hypocrisy. There is a world of difference between how Republicans viewed oversight when Barack Obama was president and their support of Trump’s obstruction. I know, because for five years I worked for Republicans on the House Oversight and Reform Committee.

In a 1957 Supreme Court ruling, Chief Justice Earl Warren wrote, “The power of Congress to conduct investigations is inherent in the legislative process. That power is broad … It comprehends probes into departments of the federal government to expose corruption, inefficiency, or waste.”

During my time on Oversight, the chief justice’s words were often cited as justification for our vigorous supervision of the Obama administration. Led by Representative Darrell Issa, my former boss, Republicans issued more than 100 subpoenas, held Attorney General Eric Holder in contempt of Congress, created a select committee to investigate Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s handling of the B******i crisis, and filed a lawsuit in federal court challenging President Obama’s use of executive privilege.

In 2011, we sent a letter to Secretary Clinton that stated: “The Committee on Oversight and Government Reform is the principal oversight committee of the House of Representatives and may at ‘any time’ investigate ‘any matter’ as set forth in House Rule X.”

Also in 2011, when we suspected an effort to intimidate a witness called to testify at a hearing, Issa sent a letter warning the Obama administration that the “inappropriate effort to intimidate” and “discourage” someone from testifying before Congress was “an unlawful attempt to interfere with a Congressional inquiry.”

Yet when Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin last week ignored a deadline to produce Trump’s tax returns, House Republicans refused to speak out against this blatant disregard for legislative authority.
And Republicans did nothing when the White House last week instructed an administration official to ignore a subpoena and not testify at a hearing regarding White House security-clearance procedures.

Contrast that with the time an IRS official refused to answer questions from Oversight Republicans—they held that official in contempt of Congress. During the contempt proceeding, Representative Jim Jordan, now the ranking Republican on the Oversight Committee, justified his v**e in favor of contempt by saying, “The only remedy we have to get to the t***h is to use every tool at our disposal” to get that official to “testify and answer the questions. That is the only remedy we have. The only route to the t***h is through the House of Representatives.”

President Trump and Republicans complain about the pace of oversight; Trump declared on Twitter on Wednesday that “there has NEVER been a President who has been more t***sparent.” But the simple t***h is that this White House is more obstructionist than the Obama White House, or any other White House, and Republicans are enabling this behavior.

During the two years that Trump’s presidency overlapped with the Republican majority in the House, Republicans issued a total of zero subpoenas to the Trump administration. To date, Trump has refused to cooperate with subpoenas issued by congressional Democrats.

Trump’s desire to shield his tax returns may provoke a constitutional standoff with Congress. He wants to slow the pace of oversight as much as possible, which means a long and tedious legal battle that will likely be decided by the Supreme Court. Trump is betting that the American people simply do not care whether or not he cooperates with congressional investigations. He’s betting that they do not have the attention span to follow a long court battle about constitutional authority. Trump believes that his stranglehold on the GOP is so tight that his f**grant disregard for checks and balances won’t matter to the Republican base or Republican elected officials. He might be right.

The entire point of having separate but equal branches of government was to create protections against the kind of tyranny and absolute rule that was common in Europe. If Trump can simply ignore Congress and act unilaterally without consequence, then he is America’s first dictator.

This fight is bigger than one hearing or one investigation or one subpoena. It is a struggle to preserve the foundation of our republic. Republicans won’t rise to the challenge. Which means it’s up to Democrats to keep Trump in check, and to support the Constitution. They have to learn to confront Trump as aggressively as we confronted Obama.
Kurt Bardella worked for Republicans on the House ... (show quote)


Your pattern is as obvious as Bozo's nose.

Every day you search and study the web, looking for any kind of dirt to smear on a man you have never met.

A man who has personally done you no wrong.

You'll believe 'anybody' who says, writes or publicizes any thing negative and you blubber over it as if you've somehow become the world's authority on judging the soul of a man.

It's as though you're holed up in some dank hovel with no ability to find joy in the world you live in.

Well Goober, you can wallow in that stupefaction til' hell freezes over.

It ain't gonna change the fact that Trump is in charge and he's kicking democrats to the curb like roadk**l.

A squall line passed through earlier and the rain caught up with me on my four wheeler as I headed back to the barn.

It's was a cool crisp rain.

Tasted just like loser tears.

Reply
May 9, 2019 23:25:02   #
Coos Bay Tom Loc: coos bay oregon
 
Liberty Tree wrote:
Democrats do not care about the Constitution, but only in getting Trump. There is a difference in a legitimate inquiry and in launching investigations in all direction in the hopes of finding something, anything yo get somebody.


The constitution is a perfect document and it has been perverted by the radical right to fit the prejudices they hold. Any one want to differ with me? I'm in the mood to slap knots on thick heads

Reply
 
 
May 9, 2019 23:27:19   #
Coos Bay Tom Loc: coos bay oregon
 
Wolf counselor wrote:
Your pattern is as obvious as Bozo's nose.

Every day you search and study the web, looking for any kind of dirt to smear on a man you have never met.

A man who has personally done you no wrong.

You'll believe 'anybody' who says, writes or publicizes any thing negative and you blubber over it as if you've somehow become the world's authority on judging the soul of a man.

It's as though you're holed up in some dank hovel with no ability to find joy in the world you live in.

Well Goober, you can wallow in that stupefaction til' hell freezes over.

It ain't gonna change the fact that Trump is in charge and he's kicking democrats to the curb like roadk**l.

A squall line passed through earlier and the rain caught up with me on my four wheeler as I headed back to the barn.

It's was a cool crisp rain.

Tasted just like loser tears.
Your pattern is as obvious as Bozo's nose. br br ... (show quote)
You talk tough but you are wrong about Slatten. You think you are one burning mass of intelligence but you are a sterotypical Texas braggart. Goober.

Reply
May 10, 2019 00:10:22   #
Wolf counselor Loc: Heart of Texas
 
Coos Bay Tom wrote:
You talk tough but you are wrong about Slatten. You think you are one burning mass of intelligence but you are a sterotypical Texas braggart. Goober.


When compared to a squawking crybaby like your butt buddy, I 'do' sound like a tough talking Texas braggart.

But that's only because you lefties have allowed yourselves to become so wussified that you can't handle a simple debate without getting yer' little feelings hurt and blubbering like spoiled whining brats.

Reply
May 10, 2019 06:28:03   #
America 1 Loc: South Miami
 
slatten49 wrote:
Kurt Bardella worked for Republicans on the House Oversight Committee back when the GOP cared about keeping the president in check.

Apr 29, 2019, by Kurt Bardella...Senior adviser for the House Oversight and Reform Committee from 2009 to 2013

President Donald Trump last Tuesday lamented on Twitter that “in the ‘old days’ if you were President and you had a good economy, you were basically immune from criticism.” The next day, he complained that Congress members “only want to continue the Witch Hunt, which I have already won.” In an interview with The Washington Post, Trump said, “There is no reason to go any further, and especially in Congress where it’s very partisan—obviously very partisan … I don’t want people testifying to a party, because that is what they’re doing if they do this.” Meanwhile, Trump has filed a lawsuit to avoid handing over his tax returns to the House.

Trump’s defiance of Congress is outrageous and dangerous. It also exposes Republicans’ hypocrisy. There is a world of difference between how Republicans viewed oversight when Barack Obama was president and their support of Trump’s obstruction. I know, because for five years I worked for Republicans on the House Oversight and Reform Committee.

In a 1957 Supreme Court ruling, Chief Justice Earl Warren wrote, “The power of Congress to conduct investigations is inherent in the legislative process. That power is broad … It comprehends probes into departments of the federal government to expose corruption, inefficiency, or waste.”

During my time on Oversight, the chief justice’s words were often cited as justification for our vigorous supervision of the Obama administration. Led by Representative Darrell Issa, my former boss, Republicans issued more than 100 subpoenas, held Attorney General Eric Holder in contempt of Congress, created a select committee to investigate Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s handling of the B******i crisis, and filed a lawsuit in federal court challenging President Obama’s use of executive privilege.

In 2011, we sent a letter to Secretary Clinton that stated: “The Committee on Oversight and Government Reform is the principal oversight committee of the House of Representatives and may at ‘any time’ investigate ‘any matter’ as set forth in House Rule X.”

Also in 2011, when we suspected an effort to intimidate a witness called to testify at a hearing, Issa sent a letter warning the Obama administration that the “inappropriate effort to intimidate” and “discourage” someone from testifying before Congress was “an unlawful attempt to interfere with a Congressional inquiry.”

Yet when Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin last week ignored a deadline to produce Trump’s tax returns, House Republicans refused to speak out against this blatant disregard for legislative authority.
And Republicans did nothing when the White House last week instructed an administration official to ignore a subpoena and not testify at a hearing regarding White House security-clearance procedures.

Contrast that with the time an IRS official refused to answer questions from Oversight Republicans—they held that official in contempt of Congress. During the contempt proceeding, Representative Jim Jordan, now the ranking Republican on the Oversight Committee, justified his v**e in favor of contempt by saying, “The only remedy we have to get to the t***h is to use every tool at our disposal” to get that official to “testify and answer the questions. That is the only remedy we have. The only route to the t***h is through the House of Representatives.”

President Trump and Republicans complain about the pace of oversight; Trump declared on Twitter on Wednesday that “there has NEVER been a President who has been more t***sparent.” But the simple t***h is that this White House is more obstructionist than the Obama White House, or any other White House, and Republicans are enabling this behavior.

During the two years that Trump’s presidency overlapped with the Republican majority in the House, Republicans issued a total of zero subpoenas to the Trump administration. To date, Trump has refused to cooperate with subpoenas issued by congressional Democrats.

Trump’s desire to shield his tax returns may provoke a constitutional standoff with Congress. He wants to slow the pace of oversight as much as possible, which means a long and tedious legal battle that will likely be decided by the Supreme Court. Trump is betting that the American people simply do not care whether or not he cooperates with congressional investigations. He’s betting that they do not have the attention span to follow a long court battle about constitutional authority. Trump believes that his stranglehold on the GOP is so tight that his f**grant disregard for checks and balances won’t matter to the Republican base or Republican elected officials. He might be right.

The entire point of having separate but equal branches of government was to create protections against the kind of tyranny and absolute rule that was common in Europe. If Trump can simply ignore Congress and act unilaterally without consequence, then he is America’s first dictator.

This fight is bigger than one hearing or one investigation or one subpoena. It is a struggle to preserve the foundation of our republic. Republicans won’t rise to the challenge. Which means it’s up to Democrats to keep Trump in check, and to support the Constitution. They have to learn to confront Trump as aggressively as we confronted Obama.
Kurt Bardella worked for Republicans on the House ... (show quote)


Top 10 Ways Obama Violated the Constitution during His Presidency:
https://www.cato.org/publications/commentary/top-10-ways-obama-violated-constitution-during-presidency
Unfortunately, the president fomented this upswing in civic interest not by talking up the constitutional aspects of his policy agenda, but by blatantly violating the strictures of our founding document:
https://www.forbes.com/sites/realspin/2013/12/23/president-obamas-top-10-constitutional-violations-of-2013/#4c75933d7667
The Obama administration has been the most lawless in U.S. history:
https://www.realclearpolitics.com/2017/01/20/10_ways_obama_violated_the_constitution_400607.html

Reply
May 10, 2019 07:08:16   #
slatten49 Loc: Lake Whitney, Texas
 
Coos Bay Tom wrote:
You talk tough but you are wrong about Slatten. You think you are one burning mass of intelligence but you are a sterotypical Texas braggart. Goober.

Thanks, Tom. But, The Peanut Man has fallen so far into an abyss of irrelevance, his frothy drivel rolls off me like rain off a hot tin roof.

Reply
 
 
May 10, 2019 07:34:27   #
Rose42
 
Coos Bay Tom wrote:
The constitution is a perfect document and it has been perverted by the radical right to fit the prejudices they hold. Any one want to differ with me? I'm in the mood to slap knots on thick heads


I will. Lol. The Constitution isn’t perfect but its the best we’ve got and its an amazing document.

The radical left also perverts the Constitution. In short it is the radicals that are doing it not just the ones on the right. We need to get rid of them all. Our government needs an enema.

Reply
May 10, 2019 08:29:16   #
Airforceone
 
Liberty Tree wrote:
Democrats do not care about the Constitution, but only in getting Trump. There is a difference in a legitimate inquiry and in launching investigations in all direction in the hopes of finding something, anything yo get somebody.


Wow democrats do not care about the constitution. But we do care about the Russians hacking into our e******ns, wow can you imagine if Obama had over 100 meeting with Russians, 7 Top advisors in jail or headed to jail, defied all 19 US intel agencies and agreed with Putin, blocking his cabinet or top advisors past and present from testifying on any kind of government oversight, defy subpoenas. Refuse to release tax returns like he said he would.

This whole Russian investigation would have been long gone if Trump just agreed to do what he said he would do. Turn over his tax returns testify with the special council and turn documents over to Congress.

Launching an investigation into Russians hacking into our e******n was generated by Comey during the early stages Trump started to appoint senior advisors to his campaign that were part of the investigation what the hell is the FBI suppose to do ignore these people because they are Trumps advisors.

The FBI was doing an investigation into Russian hacking and found Trump what is the FBI to do ignore it.

Reply
May 10, 2019 09:01:32   #
lindajoy Loc: right here with you....
 
archie bunker wrote:
I'm done with it all. Over it. Both political parties are there for v**es, and are both dirty, and hypocritical.
I have a life to live, and it is meaningless to any of these clowns (being nice here).

People getting all worked up over this s**t is all they're after. I ain't doing it no more. I need to sharpen my lawnmower blade for the unlikely day that it'll ever dry up enough for me to use it.
I also have to go get a haircut, and horse feed, and possibly a new phone that'll work better for my work Saturday.

I have things to do other than read this bulls**t anymore.
It's all a show. A game. I'm not playing anymore.
I'm done with it all. Over it. Both political part... (show quote)


Bravo and right there with you.. One of the reasons I visit here less and less..

Got much better things to do than come in here and read half t***hs, if not out and out lies or wallow in the negativity of those blinded by facts.. Hypracasy screams bloody damn murder in here and enough already!!

Also glad to see you posting... Was worried about you and all the dang tornados down there...

Sunday morning spectacular... where I’d rather be..
Sunday morning spectacular... where I’d rather be....

Reply
May 10, 2019 09:09:12   #
lpnmajor Loc: Arkansas
 
slatten49 wrote:
Kurt Bardella worked for Republicans on the House Oversight Committee back when the GOP cared about keeping the president in check.

Apr 29, 2019, by Kurt Bardella...Senior adviser for the House Oversight and Reform Committee from 2009 to 2013

President Donald Trump last Tuesday lamented on Twitter that “in the ‘old days’ if you were President and you had a good economy, you were basically immune from criticism.” The next day, he complained that Congress members “only want to continue the Witch Hunt, which I have already won.” In an interview with The Washington Post, Trump said, “There is no reason to go any further, and especially in Congress where it’s very partisan—obviously very partisan … I don’t want people testifying to a party, because that is what they’re doing if they do this.” Meanwhile, Trump has filed a lawsuit to avoid handing over his tax returns to the House.

Trump’s defiance of Congress is outrageous and dangerous. It also exposes Republicans’ hypocrisy. There is a world of difference between how Republicans viewed oversight when Barack Obama was president and their support of Trump’s obstruction. I know, because for five years I worked for Republicans on the House Oversight and Reform Committee.

In a 1957 Supreme Court ruling, Chief Justice Earl Warren wrote, “The power of Congress to conduct investigations is inherent in the legislative process. That power is broad … It comprehends probes into departments of the federal government to expose corruption, inefficiency, or waste.”

During my time on Oversight, the chief justice’s words were often cited as justification for our vigorous supervision of the Obama administration. Led by Representative Darrell Issa, my former boss, Republicans issued more than 100 subpoenas, held Attorney General Eric Holder in contempt of Congress, created a select committee to investigate Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s handling of the B******i crisis, and filed a lawsuit in federal court challenging President Obama’s use of executive privilege.

In 2011, we sent a letter to Secretary Clinton that stated: “The Committee on Oversight and Government Reform is the principal oversight committee of the House of Representatives and may at ‘any time’ investigate ‘any matter’ as set forth in House Rule X.”

Also in 2011, when we suspected an effort to intimidate a witness called to testify at a hearing, Issa sent a letter warning the Obama administration that the “inappropriate effort to intimidate” and “discourage” someone from testifying before Congress was “an unlawful attempt to interfere with a Congressional inquiry.”

Yet when Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin last week ignored a deadline to produce Trump’s tax returns, House Republicans refused to speak out against this blatant disregard for legislative authority.
And Republicans did nothing when the White House last week instructed an administration official to ignore a subpoena and not testify at a hearing regarding White House security-clearance procedures.

Contrast that with the time an IRS official refused to answer questions from Oversight Republicans—they held that official in contempt of Congress. During the contempt proceeding, Representative Jim Jordan, now the ranking Republican on the Oversight Committee, justified his v**e in favor of contempt by saying, “The only remedy we have to get to the t***h is to use every tool at our disposal” to get that official to “testify and answer the questions. That is the only remedy we have. The only route to the t***h is through the House of Representatives.”

President Trump and Republicans complain about the pace of oversight; Trump declared on Twitter on Wednesday that “there has NEVER been a President who has been more t***sparent.” But the simple t***h is that this White House is more obstructionist than the Obama White House, or any other White House, and Republicans are enabling this behavior.

During the two years that Trump’s presidency overlapped with the Republican majority in the House, Republicans issued a total of zero subpoenas to the Trump administration. To date, Trump has refused to cooperate with subpoenas issued by congressional Democrats.

Trump’s desire to shield his tax returns may provoke a constitutional standoff with Congress. He wants to slow the pace of oversight as much as possible, which means a long and tedious legal battle that will likely be decided by the Supreme Court. Trump is betting that the American people simply do not care whether or not he cooperates with congressional investigations. He’s betting that they do not have the attention span to follow a long court battle about constitutional authority. Trump believes that his stranglehold on the GOP is so tight that his f**grant disregard for checks and balances won’t matter to the Republican base or Republican elected officials. He might be right.

The entire point of having separate but equal branches of government was to create protections against the kind of tyranny and absolute rule that was common in Europe. If Trump can simply ignore Congress and act unilaterally without consequence, then he is America’s first dictator.

This fight is bigger than one hearing or one investigation or one subpoena. It is a struggle to preserve the foundation of our republic. Republicans won’t rise to the challenge. Which means it’s up to Democrats to keep Trump in check, and to support the Constitution. They have to learn to confront Trump as aggressively as we confronted Obama.
Kurt Bardella worked for Republicans on the House ... (show quote)


As the world turns......................watch Republicans howl when the next Democrat in the White House defies Congress - siting the precedent they are setting now.

Reply
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