Trump administration blocks Biden’s bid to protect autopen records
Power grabs behind closed doors rarely stay hidden for long. The latest clash between past and present administrations reveals a troubling saga of secrecy and accountability.
Former President Joe Biden’s attempt to claim executive privilege over documents tied to his administration’s autopen use was shot down by the Trump White House on Tuesday, Fox News reported.
The autopen, a machine replicating signatures, became a lightning rod for scrutiny after Biden’s team allegedly used it for official documents, raising questions about who truly held the reins of power. Congressional probes have dug into whether aides bypassed the president’s direct approval, a concern now amplified by the Trump administration’s refusal to let these records hide behind privilege.
Executive Privilege Denied with Sharp Rebuke
Biden penned a letter to the National Archives on Oct. 1, 2025, claiming disclosure of these files would harm the presidency’s ability to function with candid advice. “I am concerned that disclosure of these materials would damage important institutional interests of the Presidency,” he wrote, a plea that falls flat when transparency is at stake.
White House Counsel David Warrington fired back with a pointed rejection, arguing that shielding such actions only deepens public distrust. His letter underscored a vital truth: “The abuse of the autopen that took place during the Biden Presidency... must be subject to a full accounting to ensure nothing similar ever happens again.”
Warrington didn’t stop there, noting discrepancies in Biden’s signatures on key documents like family pardons. If the pen wasn’t in Biden’s hand, whose was it, and why should that be cloaked from the American people?
Congressional Scrutiny Unearths Disturbing Patterns
House and Senate investigations, led by figures like Rep. James Comer, R-Ky., have exposed potential cover-ups around Biden’s mental capacity and executive actions. Comer’s October report demanded a Justice Department review of all Biden-signed documents, suspecting aides hid the president’s condition while wielding unauthorized power via autopen.
The Heritage Foundation’s Oversight Project fueled these concerns earlier in 2025, revealing identical signatures on numerous executive orders. Such uniformity suggests a machine, not a man, often acted as commander-in-chief, a chilling prospect for any citizen valuing constitutional integrity.
Trump himself has weighed in, calling this “the biggest scandal maybe of the last 100 years in this country.” His Truth Social post in December, stating “roughly 92% of documents from the Biden era were signed by the autopen,” paints a picture of a presidency potentially hijacked by unelected hands.
Biden’s Defense Rings Hollow to Many
Biden has pushed back, insisting in a June statement, “I made the decisions during my presidency... any suggestion that I didn’t is ridiculous and false.” Yet, when signatures don’t match and aides are implicated in steering the ship, such assertions crumble under scrutiny.
House Democrats countered Comer’s findings, claiming no evidence supports allegations of Biden’s unfitness or wrongdoing. Their rebuttal feels like a weak shield against mounting evidence that something was amiss in the Oval Office.
Public concern over Biden’s mental sharpness isn’t new, simmering since before 2020 and erupting after his faltering June 2024 debate performance. That moment, coupled with his July 2024 exit from the race, only sharpened doubts about who truly governed during his term.
Transparency Must Prevail Over Political Games
The Trump administration’s stance, while firm, aligns with a broader call for clarity over convenience. Warrington’s jab at reporters who ignored Biden’s struggles until forced to notice hits a nerve, exposing media complicity in downplaying a national concern.
This isn’t about partisan score-settling, but about safeguarding the presidency from becoming a puppet’s stage. If executive privilege can bury evidence of such overreach, then the very foundation of accountable governance is at risk.
Americans deserve to know who signed their laws, pardons, and orders. The autopen scandal, now laid bare by congressional grit and Trump’s refusal to let it slide, demands answers, not excuses, to prevent history from repeating this shadowy chapter.





