Pence’s plan to fight special counsel subpoena is doomed – according to this legal expert

After having claimed that he was immune, as an executive, from having to answer questions from the January 6 Committee, former Vice President Mike Pence is now trying the opposite strategy to avoid a subpoena from special counsel Jack Smith and claiming, as President of the Senate, his actions at the time of the attack are shielded by the Speech and Debate Clause of the Constitution.

But this strategy is ultimately doomed to fail, argued former White House ethics czar and impeachment counsel Norm Eisen in conversation with CNN’s Bianna Golodryga on Tuesday.

“So what do you make of this rather novel strategy from the former vice president and his lawyers?” asked Golodryga.

“Bianna, the executive privilege argument to resist testifying as failed,” said Eisen. “So now they’re pulling another arrow from the quiver of constitutional defenses, but it’s not gonna work because there is no absolute speech or debate immunity for a vice president or anyone else from showing up and answering the kinds of questions we have here.”

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“First, if you look at the Speech and Debate clause, it says senators and representatives, not Presidents of the Senate or other constitutional officers,” said Eisen. “He was not a senator, he was not a representative. So he loses on that ground. And then the clause is also limited to speech or debate in either house. So if he was saying, well, I don’t want to be questioned about what I was thinking when I was sitting in the chair, presiding over the chamber, that’s one thing. But it’s dubious whether that blocks all questions about everything that happened in the runup.”

“So you if you were to advise Mike Pence, which you are not, you say the better solution would have been to follow the Lindsey Graham path, and that is just to show up and answer each question by question and take it from there?” asked Golodryga.

“Well, if I were advising Mike Pence, I would have to give him not only legal advice, but political advice,” said Eisen. “Pence is in a political pickle, not just a legal one, because he doesn’t want to look like he’s cooperating with this investigation. He did the same thing, Bianna, with the January 6 investigation. He has to put up a show of resistance. So I think that may be the right thing for him with the Republican primary electorate. It is not the right thing for America, however, and so I do think from a legal perspective he should say, I’ll show up, I’ll answer questions and if some of them are constitutionally prohibited, I’ll object.”

“There is no blanket immunity of this kind for a vice president under the Speech or Debate Clause,” Eisen added. “This will just prolong this investigation.”

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Norm Eisen says Pence plan to avoid DOJ testimony won’t work

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‘Never felt more betrayed’: MAGA rebels over Trump’s ‘treasonous’ Qatar base in Idaho



After years of advocating "America First," President Donald Trump's administration, the Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth announced on Friday, "I'm also proud that today we're signing a letter of acceptance to build a Qatari Emiri Air Force facility at the Mountain Home Airbase in Idaho."

It led to a swift meltdown from some of the president's top allies.

Constitutionalist and MAGA influencer "The General" was furious, calling it outright "treason."

"We are in the middle of rolling out military across the entire USA and then bringing in a non-NATO country military into the USA is TREASON. U.S. and Qatar sign deal to open a Qatari 'air force facility,' in the U.S., at Mountain Home Air Force Base, Idaho," he wrote on X.

"Is this what 'shared defense goals' means now — or just the latest way our politicians get paid to sell out our country?" asked Amy Mek, the editor-in-chief of RAIR, an organization that advocates for the U.S. to return to a country run by Judeo-Christian values. "Twenty-four years after foreign nationals trained in our flight schools flew planes into our buildings, our leaders are inviting their financiers to train inside our bases. This is what happens when you gut national-security training, scrub every mention of Islam, jihad, and Sharia from the manuals, and let Obama- and Biden-era bureaucrats turn counterterrorism into cultural sensitivity class. We’re being led by officials who no longer recognize or refuse to name the enemy they’re inviting into our own backyard.'

Close ally to President Trump, Laura Loomer, lamented the news after advocating that the administration declare the Muslim Brotherhood an international terrorist organization.

"Well, I guess this isn’t going to happen since we just gave the Muslim Brotherhood an air base in Idaho. So much for my decade worth of hard work trying to protect Americans from the threat of Islamic terror," said Loomer about the new base.

"No foreign country should have a military base on U.S. soil," she also said. "Especially Islamic countries. I have never felt more betrayed by the GOP than I do now watching Islamic jihadists get away with implementing Sharia law in the US and now they are getting their own airbase where they will train to kill Americans."

She went on to warn that it would make America less safe by setting up "for America to be attacked by Islamic savages from Qatar, the biggest funders of Islamic terror in the entire world. So much so, the Saudis and Emiratis find Qatar to be TOXIC. I need to see how much more of my life I am going to dedicate to a party that won’t address the threat of Islam in the West. The betrayal stings. WE ARE LOSING OUR COUNTRY!"

Content creator and influencer Red Eagle Politics denied the reporting.

"We aren’t giving Argentina a free $20 Billion handout, and we aren’t building an Air Force Base for Qatar in Idaho. The amount of dishonest lunacy on this app is reaching new heights," he wrote on X.

Utah state Sen. Nate Blouin, a Democrat, pointed out that Idaho Republicans "have been crowing about" legislation similar to that his state enacted "blocking foreign ownership of land in their state."

Dan Caldwell, former senior advisor to Hegseth, wrote on X that it wasn't that big of a deal.

"The freak out around this is of course totally unwarranted since this is actually a pretty common practice with countries that buy and operate a lot of U.S. military aircraft. Singapore has a similar facility and detachment for its F-15 training unit at this very same airbase," he said.

Caldwell is one of the DOD aides who was forced out amid Hegseth's Signalgate scandal. He has denied any wrongdoing.