US Supreme Court dismisses clash over Trump hotel documents
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[June 27, 2023]
By John Kruzel
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday ordered the
dismissal of a lawsuit by a group of congressional Democrats who had
sought details about a government lease for a Washington hotel covering
the time when it was owned by Republican former President Donald Trump.
The court acted after the lawmakers this month voluntarily dropped their
2017 lawsuit against the General Services Administration (GSA), the
agency that manages federal government real estate, focused on what was
called the Trump International Hotel. The justices last month had agreed
to hear a bid by President Joe Biden's administration to block the
lawsuit.
Seventeen Democratic members of the House of Representatives Oversight
and Reform Committee sued the GSA, seeking information about a 2013
lease of the Old Post Office building just a few blocks from the White
House to Trump's company to convert it into a hotel. The hotel became a
gathering spot for Trump supporters, lobbyists and foreign dignitaries.
The Trump Organization last year completed the $375 million sale of the
hotel's lease to an investment firm that planned to rebrand the
property.
The case pursued by the lawmakers had tested whether small groups of
legislators have the proper legal standing to sue to enforce a federal
law aimed at obtaining information from federal agencies. The GSA had
rejected several requests by Democrats, whose party was then - as today
- in the minority in the House, saying they lacked the authority as
individual members to conduct oversight.
A federal judge had previously dismissed the lawsuit, finding that the
committee members did not as legislators suffer the kind of legal injury
that would entitle them to sue.
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The Trump International Hotel is seen in
Washington, U.S. September 28, 2020. REUTERS/Erin Scott/File Photo
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit
revived the case in 2020, concluding: "A rebuffed request for
information to which the requester is statutorily entitled is a
concrete, particularized and individualized personal injury."
Biden's Justice Department, defending the GSA, had appealed the case
to the Supreme Court, saying that the case could set an unwelcome
precedent by allowing just a few members of Congress, even fringe
members of a minority party, to distract and harass executive branch
officials.
David Vladeck, a lawyer representing the lawmakers, said the
justices on Monday did "exactly what we asked the Supreme Court to
do."
Vladeck pointed to Democratic U.S. House member Jamie Raskin's
comments this month that the GSA produced the vast majority of
records requested, enabling the lawmakers to make public Trump's
receipt of millions of dollars in "emoluments" from foreign
governments and the Secret Service, as well as his efforts to
conceal millions of dollars in losses from the hotel.
The U.S. Constitution's "emoluments" clauses bar federal officials
from accepting gifts from foreign governments without congressional
approval, and the president from receiving gifts from states. Trump
argued that Democratic lawmakers were reading the emoluments clauses
too broadly and that the nation's founders were prohibiting outright
bribes.
(Reporting by John Kruzel; Editing by Will Dunham)
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