US Supreme Court to Hear Dispute Over Trump Documents

Facts

  • The US Supreme Court has decided to take up a case concerning whether Democratic Party lawmakers should be allowed to sue to obtain documents surrounding the former Washington, D.C., hotel owned by former Pres. Trump.1
  • Democrats on the House Oversight Committee first launched their legal bid against the then-executive branch to retrieve the records in 2017, having been denied access to information about the Trump International Hotel by the former president.2
  • The case, officially called Carnahan v. Maloney, was dismissed in 2018 by a federal circuit court before the decision was overturned in a US Court of Appeals by a 2-1 panel vote in 2020.3
  • Democrats wish to investigate how in 2013 a lease agreement between the General Services Administration (GSA) and the Trump Old Post Office LLC allowed a federal office to be transformed into a hotel. Trump sold the hotel in 2022, which is now reopened as a Waldorf Astoria.4
  • The case currently sees House Democrats face off against the Biden Administration, who have aligned with the Trump-era policy to only respond to demands for information from the House majority.5
  • Lawsuits have accused Trump of violating the US Constitution's anti-corruption provisions by maintaining ownership of his businesses while in office. Despite this, the Biden admin. has appealed to SCOTUS on the basis of potentially setting a dangerous precedent by letting House committee minorities request information as they please.6

Sources: 1The Hill, 2Associated Press, 3USA Today, 4CBS, 5POLITICO, and 6US News & World Report.

Narratives

  • Pro-Trump narrative, as provided by The Western Journal. While the case will be heard in the fall, the 95-year-old law used by House Democrats lacks any real legal precedent and has not led to any previously significant rulings. The decision will be important to clarify how such a law should be used in the future when a compromise between the legislative and the executive branches fails to occur.
  • Democratic narrative, as provided by Citizens for Ethics. Since Trump’s hotel turned into the Waldorf, visits — and spending — by prominent Republican political figures have all but dried up. It is certainly clear that whatever Trump’s intentions were, in reality, what the hotel was used for was more than simply a night’s stay and cocktails, but rather influence.

Predictions