A good argument can be made that the House should have subpoenaed more and fought for them in court. Of course that would have dragged on for months and who knows if it would have yielded more fruit?
They’re doing that with the Mueller probe and it’s practically dead. That’s why it was a disingenuous argument for Trumpkins. They just wanted this to get swallowed by the news cycle.
I tend to think DOJ is right that the courts shouldn’t be involved.
US v. Nixon is a valid constitutional interpretation.
Nixon was about the president ignoring a subpoena issued by the prosecutor... through the courts. It wasn’t a congressional subpoena at all.
But the holding is still good guidance for Congress: when a co-equal branch has been delegated a constitutional responsibility (due process in a criminal trial for the judiciary or impeachment in the legislature) that responsibility is superior to a blanket assertion of executive privilege. The interest in secrecy bends to the constitution.
But, it’s not the court’s duty to enforce the legislature’s subpoena. And why/how would they? The court doesn’t have a police force or an army. Their authority is the same as congressional authority: It relies on the mutual respect and comity between the three branches. So if Trump can disregard a congressional subpoena, why would he honor a court order demanding that he follow that subpoena?
The branch of government that has the ability to impose its will on the president isn’t the judicial branch. What can they do to the president? They could order him jailed, I suppose, but who would jail him? And if the Senate won’t remove him for failing to honor a congressional subpoena, why would the framers have expected them to remove him for ignoring a court order?
Impeachment is the mechanism by which those subpoenas are enforced. Particularly in this case, where there is ample evidence that the subpoenaed parties are being instructed not to comply.