"The Trump Administration has recently questioned the legal validity of numerous investigative demands
made by House committees. These objections have been based on various grounds, but two specific
arguments will be addressed in this Sidebar. First, the President and other Administration officials have
contended that certain committee demands lack a valid “legislative purpose” and therefore do not fall
within Congress’s investigative authority. This objection has been made not only in response to
investigations seeking information relating to the President’s personal finances, including his financialrecords and federal tax returns, but also to challenge a subpoena issued by the House Judiciary Committee
for the complete version of Special Counsel Mueller’s report along with underlying evidence and
materials. Second, the President has made a more generalized claim that his advisers cannot be made to
testify before Congress, even in the face of a committee subpoena. This position, based upon the
executive branch’s longstanding conception of immunity for presidential advisers from compelled
congressional testimony regarding their official duties, was recently put into effect by the White House in
a letter announcing that the President directed former White House counsel Don McGahn not to appear at
a scheduled House Judiciary Committee hearing. The letter asserted that Mr. McGahn, now a private
citizen, “is absolutely immune from compelled congressional testimony with respect to matters occurring
during his service as a senior adviser to the President.”.."
Congressional investigations
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