There is considerable precedent for elected executive officials being asked to


In July the former Chief of Staff to Vice President Mike Pence, Marc Short, warned that if the January 6 Committee compelled the former Vice President to testify it would set a “risky precedent”. Harry Baumgarten reminds us that throughout US history current and former members of the executive branch have testified before Congress and argues that such a request of Pence should not lead to threats of a future Republican investigation towards President Biden in reprisal.

In July, Marc Short, former Chief of Staff to Vice President Mike Pence, warned the January 6 Committee to consider the ramifications of calling a former vice president to testify before Congress. The question posed to him by CBS’ Catherine Herridge related to whether Pence was actively considering being interviewed by the Committee. Short’s answer cautioned that Congressional subpoena power could be used to compel President Biden to testify before a Republican-controlled Congress next year if the January 6 Committee were to establish the “risky precedent” of compelling former vice presidents to testify.

Beyond Short’s lack of concern for addressing the harm wrought to our democracy during last year’s coup attempt, his leap to discussing subpoenas overlooks the fact that Pence need not be compelled to speak to the January 6 Committee. Such investigative committees often do rely on subpoenas where voluntary testimony, or else the mere threat of a subpoena, fails. Yet, in Pence’s case, the Committee has stated a clear preference for his voluntary testimony. Although Short himself testified only after a subpoena had been issued, this need not be the case for Pence, who already publicly rebuffed President Trump’s pressure during the events in question and is in a position to elevate himself above partisan rancor, if he so chooses.

Vice-presidents and elected executive officials have testified to Congress in the past

Short’s warning also misses the mark on precedent. As numerous sources make clear, there is centuries’ worth of precedent concerning current and former executive branch elected officials testifying before Congress. President Washington testified before the entire Senate in 1789 concerning Indian treaties. President Lincoln and President Wilson likewise testified before Congress during their presidencies. Vice President Schuyler Colfax testified while in office as part of a corruption investigation that concerned actions of his prior to assuming the role of vice president. Notably, President Ford testified before a House Judiciary Subcommittee concerning his decision to pardon President Nixon. Other high-level executive branch officials have done the same.

If sitting executive branch elected officials can be asked to testify before Congress, then how can this not apply to former ones? Precedent exists for this too. President Theodore Roosevelt, and others, testified before Congress after their presidencies ended. Roosevelt in fact testified twice, voluntarily, on unrelated matters, even when difficult. He, of course, was also a former vice president.

Where precedent exists for requesting voluntary testimony from such officials, why should…



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