Report: Trump Took A Bunch Of Records With Him To Mar-A-Lago

Former President Trump took a bunch of records from his administration with him when he left the White House, the Washington Post reported Monday — forcing the National Archives to trek down to Mar-a-Lago to retrieve them.

The Post cited three people familiar with the National Archives’ Florida trip.

Trump advisers described the former president’s decision to hang on to the records as not nefarious, the Post said. Among Trump’s mementos, the Post reported, were his correspondence with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un — once fondly described by Trump as “love letters” — and a message former president Barack Obama had left for Trump when he departed the White House.

Though all presidents have some violations of the Presidential Records Act, the Post noted, the Trump administration took those violations to new heights. The law requires Presidents to preserve records, but doesn’t offer the National Archives many tools with which to enforce compliance.

The Trump administration has presented the National Archives with other challenges: Some of the documents it obtained were torn up, and had to be taped back together, the Post reported last month.

The way in which the administration preserved its records has become a particular focus in light of the Jan. 6 Select Committee’s probe into the day of the insurrection and the events that led up to it. Trump claimed many of his records should be shielded from the committee due to executive privilege, an argument he took all the way to the Supreme Court.

But the Court did not bite, ruling 8-1 that the National Archives could begin providing records to the committee. Justice Clarence Thomas dissented.

The process for turning those records over has started, and details about them have surfaced in the press. Among them was a draft executive order allowing the department of defense to seize voting machines, and appointing a special counsel to examine them. That order was never signed.

Youngkin Campaign Lashes Out At High School Student On Twitter, Then Deletes Tweet

A lot of things happened this weekend. Here are some of them.

A Worthy Adversary

The new governor of Virginia’s campaign picked a fight with a high school student on Saturday — even posting the 17-year-old’s photo online — after the student tweeted out a public radio report that the governor’s staff took issue with.

  • Here’s how it started: A Richmond public radio station, VPM, reported last week that Governor Glenn Youngkin was reversing efforts by previous Virginia governors to teach about the history of enslaved people at the governor’s mansion.
  • Youngkin’s staff didn’t take issue with VPM’s reporting until the news outlet, in a follow-up story, reported that a historian who worked at the mansion had resigned, according to a play-by-play in the Washington Post.
    • A spokesperson for the governor then pushed back on a detail in the initial report, which had stated that Youngkin would be converting a classroom for teaching about the mansion’s history into a family room.
    • In fact, a decision had not yet been made about what to do with that room, the spokesperson said.
  • Here’s where it gets weird. High School senior Ethan Lynne tweeted the VPM report: “NEW: The historian tasked with teaching about slavery at the Virginia Governors Mansion just resigned after finding the Youngkins converted her classroom into a family room – and emptied her office,” he wrote. “Shameful.”
    • When the report was corrected, Lynne even went so far as to correct his tweet as well.
  • But Youngkin’s team was on the offensive. “Here’s a picture of Ethan with a man that had a Blackface/KKK photo in his yearbook,” the @TeamYoungkin account tweeted on Saturday, sharing a picture of Lynne standing with former governor Ralph Northam.
    • There’s no mystery about who Lynne is. His profile identifies him as: “Virginian. HS Senior. Democrat.”
    • The tweet was eventually deleted the next day. A Youngkin campaign strategist told various outlets that the campaign didn’t realize Lynne was a minor; he wouldn’t identify who wrote the tweet.
  • “A governor’s campaign account has attacked a minor — to me that was a new low,” Lynne told the Washington Post Sunday. “And they just now took it down. It was up for over 12 hours. I received no apology, no communication, nothing.”
  • UPDATE: On Monday morning, Youngkin tweeted out an apology.

‘Legitimate Political Discourse’

In case you missed it, that’s how the Republican National Committee characterized January 6 in voting to censure Reps. Liz Cheney (R-WY) and Adam Kinzinger (R-IL) on Friday.

  • “From my front row seat I did not see a lot of legitimate political discourse,” Marc Short, a top advisor to Mike Pence, quipped to Chuck Todd during a Meet The Press appearance Sunday.
  • Republicans were pressed on the “legitimate political discourse” assertion over the weekend. The usual handful of moderates denounced it.
  • House Foreign Affairs ranking member Rep. Michael McCaul (R-TX), on ABC to discuss the Ukraine-Russia standoff, told host Martha Radditz the statement “pertains to the legitimate protesters that I saw that day.”
  • Chris Christie offered up his political analysis: “First of all, they say that part of the reason for the resolution is they want to keep the focus on Joe Biden and the failures of the Democratic administration,” Christie told Radditz. “Well, how did that work for you? All anybody is talking about this weekend is this resolution rather than talking about the failures of the Biden administration.” 
  • RNC Chair Ronna McDaniel thinks everyone is getting it wrong — though it’s not super clear what part she takes issue with.

Besties

Sens. Joe Manchin (D-WV) and Lisa Murkowski (R-AK) showed up on CNN side-by-side this weekend to endorse one another.

  • “It’s hypocritical to basically work with a person day-in and day-out, and then when they’re in cycle, you’re supposed to be against them because they have an R or D by their name,” Manchin said.
  • Murkowski is facing a primary challenge from a Trump-backed opponent, Kelly Tshibaka.

Getting Out Of Hand In Canada

Ottawa’s mayor has declared a state of emergency as a protest by a small group of truckers against vaccine requirements has morphed into a rallying point for anyone upset by a wide spectrum of far-right, North American grievances, The Globe and Mail reports.

  • Influencers involved with the protest have drawn parallels between the occupation of Ottawa and Jan. 6, optimistic that their demonstration might ultimately echo America’s insurrection.
  • Rep. Chip Roy (R-TX) last week shared online a conspiracy theory that Justin Trudeau had fled to the U.S. amid the protests. (Needless to say, it wasn’t true. The Prime Minister actually just had COVID, and was isolating — in Canada.)
  • Trump, of course, has praised the protest.

Happy Birthday

John Durham’s probe into the origins of the investigation into the Trump campaign’s Russia ties is now 1,000 days old, by Marcy Wheeler’s calculation.

  • That, by the way, is significantly longer than the probe Trump world hoped Durham would undercut: The Mueller probe went on for 674 days.
  • So what’s he up to? That’s anyone’s guess, but some DOJ alumni gave TPM’s Josh Kovensky their hypotheses late last year.

Still Trying

Former New York Governor Andrew Cuomo is planning a “comeback,” the Wall Street Journal reports.

  • The former governor’s aides and lawyers have been attempting to undermine the accusation against him, and have been calling former allies to complain about New York Attorney General Letitia James and to try to shore up their support, according to the Journal.
  • Cuomo had a “lengthy dinner” with New York City’s new, controversy-courting mayor, Eric Adams, last week, Page Six reports.

RIP

Author, academic and cultural commentator Todd Gitlin passed away Saturday at 79. A key voice of the ’60s, Todd remained a prolific writer throughout his life (and was, at times, a contributor to TPM). A number of us had worked with him over the years.

Have thoughts on Morning Memo? Please share them with us!

Marc Short: Trump Had ‘Snake Oil Salesmen’ Giving Him ‘A Lot Of Bad Advice’ On Pence’s Authority

Marc Short, who served as former Vice President Mike Pence’s chief of staff, on Sunday offered some insight into the ex-VP’s decision to counter former President Trump’s efforts to get him to overturn the 2020 election.

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Top GOPer: Pence ‘Did His Constitutional Duty’ By Certifying 2020 Election Results

Senate Republican Conference chair John Barrasso (R-WY) on Sunday said that former Vice President Mike Pence fulfilled his “constitutional duty” by certifying the 2020 presidential election results. Barrasso’s remarks came days after the ex-VP debunked former President Trump’s claim that Pence could’ve overturned the results.

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Rubio Avoids Condemning Trump’s Pressure Campaign Aimed At Pence

Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL) on Sunday refused to call out former President Trump for trying to get former Vice President Mike Pence to overturn the 2020 presidential election results. This comes as Pence shot down Trump’s insistence that he could’ve overturned the election results.

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Bannon’s Legal Team Claims Prosecutors Sought Email, Phone Records Of Defense Lawyer

The legal team of Steve Bannon claimed in a court filing on Friday that prosecutors last month provided more than 790 documents that “reflected efforts by the Government to obtain telephone records and email records from the personal and professional accounts of defense counsel” Robert Costello, who is one of Bannon’s three criminal defense attorneys.

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Don’t Mess with Mike?

“Were you struck, as was I, by the absence of an ad hominem attack on Pence in Trump’s responsive statement? Trump attacks ‘Old Crow Mitch McConnell’ but nary a word against Pence. Looks to me like an invitation for a quid pro quo — I won’t attack you if you are circumspect with the Jan 6 Committee.  He knows that Pence has the goods but he is offering a non-aggression pact.”

Continue reading “Don’t Mess with Mike?”

Alabama Serves The Supreme Court An Opportunity To Further Hobble The Voting Rights Act

Alabama’s congressional maps, which were tossed just last week by federal judges in a surprise loss for the state, have now become a battleground for the future of Americans’ ability to fight racial gerrymanders. 

Continue reading “Alabama Serves The Supreme Court An Opportunity To Further Hobble The Voting Rights Act”

‘Congressional Workers Union’ Announces Effort To Organize Congressional Staffers

A group of congressional staffers on Friday announced an effort to unionize the Capitol’s press officers, policy wonks and constituent case workers, saying it was time to give staffers a voice in the workplace. 

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