Politics | Michael Mukasey Executive Privilege Goes to Court Ruling in lawmakers' challenge could cement power grab By Nick McMaster Posted Apr 25, 2008 9:48 PM CDT Copied House Speaker Nancy Pelosi of Calif. speaks during a news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, Jan. 29, 2008. (AP Photo) The civil suit brought by Congress as it investigates the 2005-06 firings of US attorneys is becoming a groundbreaking constitutional tussle that could decide the true scope of executive privilege. The precedent that could be set in the ruling from a US district court is now more significant than the truth behind the firings, Mother Jones reports. If a judge decides Congress has no right to pursue in civil court contempt citations against two Bush administration officials, it will close that avenue permanently, essentially cementing the executive power grab. Things are muddier if there's a ruling: The White House could try to "run out the clock" by extending appeals past the current government's expiration date in January—leaving matters unresolved. Read These Next NYC police encountered a horrific scene after a fire was reported. Charlie Kirk's death has been confirmed. Why does the Wheel of Fortune click? Now we know. Amy Coney Barrett weighs in a possible third Trump term. Report an error