Over the weekend, we learned the National Archives apparently has reason to believe that it still hasn’t recovered all of the documents former President Donald Trump had in his possession after he left the White House.
“While there is no easy way to establish absolute accountability, we do know that we do not have custody of everything we should,” acting Archivist Debra Steidel Wall wrote in a letter Friday to Rep. Carolyn Maloney, D-N.Y., the chairwoman of the Oversight and Reform Committee.
Everyone still of the belief that prosecuting Trump would represent some fatal departure from normalcy would do well to open their eyes and see that the corrosion of norms has already occurred.
In lieu of punishment, Trump is effectively behaving like a tyrant without needing any official title to assert that power. He’s hoarding valuable government property, presumably operating in spaces where his possession of that property bolsters his idea of power, and seemingly threatening his political enemies.
And we need to be honest about how the American justice system, in all its inequality, has enabled him. Justice Department trepidation and a conservative judge have essentially established a new threat in Trump: a pseudo-presidential enterprise that is paid deference to and handled with kid gloves.
On Monday, reports from The Washington Post and The New York Times put a finer point on Trump’s alleged criminality by reporting that he had asked one of his lawyers to say he had returned all the documents to the National Archives, when the lawyer wasn’t sure that was true. MSNBC and NBC News have not independently verified the reports.
According to the Post:








