The staff suspected that the chief himself was standing there, leaning on crockery, tore important papers to shreds.
It is narrated in a book on Trump, written by New York Times journalist Maggie Haberman, who is known for having unusually good access to the former president’s inner circle.
The book “The Man of Confidence” will not be published until this fall, But the anecdote was leaked last week in the continuing history of heavily writing about the real estate mogul’s time in power.
Trump responds with a “clear mistake.” But according to the Washington Post, the president was so used to tearing up and confiscating documents that the National Archives had since had to record them together. And in January, 15 boxes of White House documents were recovered from Trump’s Mar-a-Lago in Florida. In addition to reviewing the January 6 storm and several criminal investigations, the National Archives is now asking the Department of Justice to investigate how it handled the documents.
Now pressure is mounting on many of Trump’s ex-employees to cooperate in these investigations.
And it’s becoming increasingly urgent for heavyweight Republicans, like Mike Pence and Mitch McConnell, to decide which side they want to end up writing history – recently, both sides have put their distance from Trump’s lies.
In Miami Beach lives a Swede who hopes Donald Trump will run in the 2024 election. Thomas J. Phillipson was president of Donald Trump’s Economic Council, and when DN’s Karen Erickson and Pontus Huck interviewed him by the pool, he presented his version of the mood in the Ovala room.
Where does he want to end up when the story of the Trump years is written?
Read more: Trump’s Swedish adviser Thomas Philipson on time in the White House
“Unapologetic writer. Bacon enthusiast. Introvert. Evil troublemaker. Friend of animals everywhere.”
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