Sigh...So the first thing the article says was exactly what I said and pointing that out is cherry picking. Whatever, dude/dudette.
My original comment:
Until it is explicitly stated by a court of law, precedence has not been established. We may see that if Trump fights it.
You know what else has not EXPLICITLY been established in court? That wearing a blue hoodie while raping someone does not make the rape legal. Go ahead... find a judge that has ruled and made that precedent... you can't. So we'll just have to wait and see if it is actually a good defense or not.
Artemus, Malintent is being sarcastic, but he is making the same point I was trying to make to you. Every court case is potentially precedent-setting. That said, it appears that we have been locked in violent agreement, because you admit that Trump will probably lose his case, if he chooses to fight a subpoena. Trump has indicated that he doesn't think an "interview" is likely, but the worst case scenario for him is that Mueller subpoenas him to testify before a grand jury. At that point, the Supreme Court, based on past precedent, would likely rule against him. Trump, as President, is virtually above the law. He can ignore the subpoena, and there is nothing that Mueller could do about it. He can't have Trump arrested, and Trump has demonstrated in the past that he is willing to flaunt the law and play games with the legal system. The only possible remedies for a defiant law-breaking President are impeachment and the 25th Amendment. Neither is likely to happen. Republicans in Congress are able to use Trump as a smokescreen to bring about serious changes in the system of government that they have long championed. Trump empowers them. So they will keep him in power as long as they can. And Trump's cabinet, including especially Pence, show no inclination to notice his unfitness to do his job.