Yeah, not really.Just in: Trump has now asked the DC Circuit for a temporary "administrative" injunction to stop the Archives from turning over his White House records to the Jan. 6 committee (set to happen tomorrow) while he pursues a full appeal https://t.co/D5E1ymERJZ pic.twitter.com/6WzpKV7DAk
— Zoe Tillman (@ZoeTillman) November 11, 2021
Clarification: The expedited schedule they've jointly proposed is for Trump to more formally argue for an injunction pending his appeal of the order denying a prelim. injunction by the district court judge — same core issue, different procedural posture https://t.co/WxsMP1zDeN
— Zoe Tillman (@ZoeTillman) November 11, 2021
Let me just get an answer in to a question probably being asked right now:Trump has asked for a placeholder "administrative" injunction until he formally asks the DC Circuit for an injunction blocking production of the docs while he pursues the appeal. The expedited schedule that the committee did agree to would push things back by less than a week pic.twitter.com/kw41hn91EM
— Zoe Tillman (@ZoeTillman) November 11, 2021
So here's where we are. Trump wants to freeze the status quo, which is to say, get his stay on the release of documents, until the court can hear the case. The panel may agree to that because the harm is de minimus. The ARA knows that, and prefers one argument rather than two (although a preliminary rejection of Trump's request would moot the entire case.). The question is: can Trump get even that, given the state of the proceedings: they don't have a strong argument, or they'd have made it by now; and the Memorandum Opinion of the Court is pretty damned good. The Court has to rule off of that at this point. It may prefer to tell Trump to pound sand. It may prefer to have it's own say, and block the Archives until they have a chance to tell them what to do on their own.I'm seeing a lot of people asking why the committee wouldn't fight the administrative injunction request in the meantime. @bradheath, as always, puts things well https://t.co/IMlBjlrVdb
— Zoe Tillman (@ZoeTillman) November 11, 2021
Appeals court temporarily blocks release of Trump's Jan. 6 recordshttps://t.co/0zrtLPJkjt
— Raw Story (@RawStory) November 11, 2021
The White House on Thursday also notified a lawyer for Mark Meadows, Trump’s former chief of staff, that Biden would waive any executive privilege that would prevent Meadows from cooperating with the committee, according to a letter obtained by The Associated Press. The committee has subpoenaed Meadows and more than two dozen other people as part of its investigation.His lawyer, George Terwilliger, issued a statement in response saying Meadows "remains under the instructions of former President Trump to respect longstanding principles of executive privilege.”“It now appears the courts will have to resolve this conflict,” Terwilliger said.
A ruling in early December could bring this nonsense to a halt, because all of these cases are going to be in the D.C. Circuit. It doesn't surprise me they did this, but I still expect the Supremes to say "Thanks, but no thanks." Especially since Congress and the POTUS agree on this, the records are government records, and Trump is just a private citizens now.
Courage.*DC Circuit panel handling the Trump records case features two Obama nominees (Millett/Wilkins) and Biden nominee Jackson. Millett, notably, was on the panel that handed Trump a loss in the Mazars subpoena case (although SCOTUS later kicked that back down) https://t.co/jjpY9IL2qL
— Zoe Tillman (@ZoeTillman) November 11, 2021
This takes #SCOTUS off the hook for now. It also gives the Court of Appeals a chance to write a careful opinion versus resolving all of this through emergency motions and orders.
— Steve Vladeck (@steve_vladeck) November 11, 2021
(To that end, this is not a panel I’d be especially excited about if I were Trump.) https://t.co/7LcGd5Q4B2
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