Majority Rule Built This Republic—The Filibuster Is Unraveling It
Ezra Klein Calls Trump a Liar Then Proves Him Right; a 'Deported Veteran'...
Life After Trump
Let’s Listen to Burke, Part Two
Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito Have Served Nobly
Is Trump’s Deal with China a Model for American Statecraft?
A Pox on the House of Netflix!
Reality Reasserts Itself: The End of Political Climate Make-Believe
Biden-Era EV Mandate Next on Chopping Block
Energy Transition Hits a Dead End
Trump to Russia: Nyet on Giving Back Alaska, We Have Plans
Ferrari, Gold Bars, and $97M Seized in Arizona Medicare Fraud Case
Tim Walz Wont Admit That Somalians Have Robbed Minnesota
Missouri Man Gets 10 Years for $174M Medicare Genetic Testing Fraud Scheme
IRS Annual Report Shows 112 Percent Surge in Tax Fraud, Identied $10.59B in...
Tipsheet

Hatch Decries 'Unconstitutional' Bill to Protect Mueller

Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-UT) believes special counsel Robert Mueller deserves protection - just not in the form of The Special Counsel Independence and Integrity Act. 

Advertisement

"What I will not do—and what I urge my colleagues to reject—is subvert our constitutional design in favor of momentary urgencies," Hatch writes in the Wall Street Journal. "You cannot protect the rule of law by violating the supreme law of the land."

The bipartisan bill, sponsored by Sens. Thom Tillis (R-NC), Lindsey Graham (R-SC), Chris Coons (D-DE) and Cory Booker (D-NJ), would mandate that the special counsel, currently investigating whether the Trump campaign colluded with Russia, can only be fired for “good cause.” That has some people wondering whether "it would unconstitutionally infringe on the president’s authority to fire executive-branch officials." The Atlantic quoted a few constitutional scholars who believe the special counsel bill goes too far.

Constitutional interpretation is not simply a matter of which side has the more persuasive argument or the nobler intentions. Realistically, the bill’s constitutionality, and thus its survival, comes down to votes—and not just those in Congress. Akhil Reed Amar, a constitutional scholar at Yale University, is among those who say Congress can’t limit the president’s firing power, because the Constitution vests all executive authority in the president. Mueller and other federal prosecutors are “inferior officers” under the Constitution, and therefore can be dismissed by a “superior” officer.

Advertisement

Hatch is under the same impression. He plans to vote against the "unconstitutional" bill.

But whatever the superficial attractiveness of an independent prosecutor, it is foreign to our system of government. The Constitution divides authority among three branches. The executive, legislative and judicial departments are meant to guard jealously their own prerogatives. Through this separation of powers, the American system assures that no branch may subvert the others. It ensures the long-term security of citizens’ rights and liberties by preventing any branch or individual from becoming too powerful.

The senator believes the investigation will ultimately vindicate Trump from any claims of Russian collusion and it is therefore in his best interest to let Mueller proceed. The Senate Judiciary Committee plans to take up the bill this week.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement