Thiessen: The partisan nature of the Democrats' impeachment inquiry will backfire

Photo by Erin Schaff of The New York Times / Rep. Steve Scalise, R-Louisiana, and other House Republicans speak outside the secure room where impeachment investigation interviews are taking place on Capitol Hill in Washington last Wednesday. House Republicans delayed a Defense Department official's deposition to impeachment investigators for hours, after storming the secure House Intelligence Committee suite and refusing to leave.
Photo by Erin Schaff of The New York Times / Rep. Steve Scalise, R-Louisiana, and other House Republicans speak outside the secure room where impeachment investigation interviews are taking place on Capitol Hill in Washington last Wednesday. House Republicans delayed a Defense Department official's deposition to impeachment investigators for hours, after storming the secure House Intelligence Committee suite and refusing to leave.

WASHINGTON - After dozens of House Republicans demanded access to a secure facility in the Capitol on Wednesday where House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff, D-California, was preparing to depose a Pentagon official, Democrats expressed outrage at the breach of protocol. "They're doing this because this is what the guilty do," said Rep. Eric Swalwell, D-California. "Innocent people cooperate with investigations. Innocent people follow the rules of the House."

Well, people engaged in impartial investigations aimed at finding the truth don't violate every precedent and standard of due process set during previous presidential impeachments.

Contrast today's partisan inquiry with the Nixon impeachment. As American Enterprise Institute President Robert Doar has pointed out, the Nixon inquiry was a model of bipartisan cooperation. The Democratic chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, Rep. Peter Rodino, D-New Jersey, assembled a unified staff (including Doar's father, John, a Republican whom Rodino appointed as special counsel). The full House voted on authorizing the inquiry. The minority was given joint subpoena power. The president's counsel was allowed to be present during depositions, given access to all of the documents and materials presented to the committee, allowed to cross-examine witnesses, and even permitted to call witnesses of his own. Most important, the committee did not leak or release selective documents cherry-picked to make the president look bad.

The same was true during the Clinton impeachment inquiry. As former House speaker Newt Gingrich explained in a recent interview, Republicans "adopted every single rule that Rodino had used in 1973." Yet today, Rodino's party is systematically undermining every principle of fairness and due process he put in place in 1973.

Take this week's testimony by acting ambassador William Taylor, who alleged that President Trump made U.S. aid contingent on "investigations." He was deposed inside a Sensitive Compartmented Information Facility (SCIF) in the Capitol, a room that is designed to protect the government's most highly classified information. Cellphones are not permitted inside a SCIF. Yet somehow what appear to be cellphone photos of his prepared statement were leaked to the news media.

But the full transcript of his deposition - including his answers to questions from Republicans challenging his accusations - remains under lock and key in that SCIF. The president's counsel is not allowed to see it, much less be present at the deposition to cross-examine the witness. So, Democrats are leaking derogatory information about the president, while restricting public access to potentially exculpatory information, all while denying him the right to see or challenge testimony against him.

Let's be clear: There is nothing wrong with holding hearings behind closed doors as long as there is due process. But secrecy and fairness go hand in hand. One without the other is corrupt.

The partisan nature of the Democrats' inquiry will backfire in a number of ways. It allows Republicans to make the case to the American people that the process is unfair. If the facts are on the Democrats' side, they have nothing to fear from transparency and due process. Second, their partisan behavior has given the president justification to refuse to cooperate with the investigation. And finally, it has made it easier for congressional Republicans to rally around the president. By failing to show even a modicum of fairness, Democrats have turned impeachment into a game of shirts vs. skins.

The Democrats' conduct shows the entire impeachment inquiry is a blatantly political exercise. Given the Constitution's requirement of a supermajority in the Senate to remove the president, it is impossible for one party to remove the president of another party from office without buy-in from the other side. Yet Democrats are making no effort to win over Republicans, much less make a vote against impeachment difficult. And that means they'll have a hard time getting buy-in from the American people.

The Washington Post Writers Group

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