RiverDog wrote:ASF you are confusing my position. Do I think that some if not most of Congresses current investigations are "fishing expeditions?" Absolutely they are. But that's not the point I'm arguing. What I am arguing is that Congress has a right, indeed, a responsibility, to investigate if it has reason to believe that any member of the Executive Branch has committed a crime.
But that is just it, they aren't stating what crime they believe he committed. That changes the whole idea of oversight and makes it over-reach turning their actions into abuse of power.
I'm arguing about the principle of checks and balances. Trump is simply stonewalling, refusing to cooperate with Congresses constitutional responsibility, holding important legislation hostage in demanding that they drop any and all investigations before he'll negotiate on other matters.
That's why he gave unfettered access to his personal advisors that he could have exerted executive privilege over during the Mueller investigation.
As far as obstruction of justice goes, it doesn't matter if a crime was or wasn't committed. If a person seeks to influence a witness, causes harm or threatens them with some form of retribution, prevents them from testifying, etc, that's obstruction of justice. Nixon himself was never charged with or even accused of a crime, nor was the crime that was committed a serious one (a 3rd rate burglary), but by orchestrating a cover up, by firing the special prosecutor, by refusing to surrender evidence, by paying off witnesses, he obstructed justice and would have been impeached for it had he not resigned.
As the saying goes, the cover-up is worse than the crime.
Again, you are trumpeting the false allegation that there is a cover up. 1.4Million documents, 500 witnesses, hundreds of hours of unfettered interviews and you say he's doing a cover up. Got it! I'm not sure how ridiculous this sounds to 68% of the American people.