Trump
fires National Archives chief
The
president has dismissed the top U.S. archivist after fuming about the agency’s
role in the criminal classified-documents case against him.
By Josh
Gerstein and Kyle Cheney
02/07/2025
11:15 PM EST
https://www.politico.com/news/2025/02/07/trump-fires-national-archives-chief-00203246
President
Donald Trump has fired the head of the National Archives, after complaining for
nearly two years about the agency’s role in the Justice Department’s
investigation and eventual prosecution of him over a slew of classified
documents kept at his Mar-a-Lago home following his first term.
The director
of the White House Presidential Personnel Office, Sergio Gor, announced in a
social media post Friday that Archivist of the United States Colleen Shogan had
been removed from her position.
“At the
direction of @realDonaldTrump the Archivist of the United States has been
dismissed tonight,” Gor wrote on X. “We thank Colleen Shogan for her service.”
Shogan, 49,
was not the archivist at the time the agency was attempting to retrieve boxes
of presidential records from Trump’s estate in 2021 and 2022. But Trump has
viewed NARA with suspicion since the investigation and has openly described its
top staff as complicit in efforts to damage him politically.
The White
House announcement followed two days of uncertainty at the Archives, following
an ABC News report Wednesday that Trump had fired Shogan and replaced her on an
acting basis with Secretary of State Marco Rubio.
However,
Archives officials said Thursday morning that they had not been apprised of any
leadership change and Shogan was continuing to carry out her duties. ABC News
later corrected its report to say there had been “extensive discussions” at the
White House about dismissing Shogan but her status was unclear.
Gor did not
announce a replacement for Shogan. It wasn’t immediately clear who will run the
agency in her absence. Without further action by Trump, Deputy Archivist Jay
Bosanko — a career employee — would automatically step in as the acting head of
the Archives.
The
Archives’ handling of presidential records, and the complex set of laws that
govern them, became a central focus of the criminal case against Trump that
played out in a South Florida federal courthouse for nearly two years before
Trump’s return to power.
Trump at
times claimed he had declassified all the sensitive records he kept at his
home, declared that he had designated them as his personal property — an option
given to him under federal recordkeeping laws — and suggested they may have
been planted at his estate. But Trump presented no evidence that he had taken
any steps, prior to leaving office, to designate the records declassified or
personal, a fact prosecutors repeatedly emphasized to suggest he knew he wasn’t
permitted to have them.
A judge
threw out the criminal case against Trump last July, ruling that the special
counsel who sought the indictment was illegally appointed. The Justice
Department appealed, but after he won the election last November, prosecutors
dropped their effort to revive the case against Trump.
A former
director of litigation at the Archives, Jason R. Baron, said he was troubled by
Shogan’s ouster. He noted that federal law says the Archivist must be appointed
“without regard to political affiliations and solely on the basis of …
professional qualifications.” The statute also says the president must notify
Congress about why the archivist was dismissed.
“No good
reason exists for firing Dr. Shogan, as she has faithfully carried out her
duties in a nonpartisan fashion in the short time since being appointed U.S.
Archivist by President Biden,” said Baron, now a professor at the University of
Maryland. “Dr. Shogan had nothing to do with the prior actions NARA staff took
in connection with the successful return of boxes of presidential records that
had been improperly transferred to Mar-a-Lago at the end of President Trump’s
first term.”
“Notwithstanding
what President Trump might choose to believe, NARA is a completely nonpartisan
agency, and NARA staff at all times have conducted themselves thoroughly
professionally in ensuring that our Nation’s history is properly preserved,”
Baron said.
As part of
its role overseeing the preservation of federal records, the Archives also sets
schedules dictating when various types of records can be destroyed and
investigates claims that records have been lost, stolen or disposed of in
violation of those requirements. The agency also preserves presidential records
and handles requests for them from Congress and the public after a president’s
term in office concludes.
President
Joe Biden nominated Shogan for the archivist job in August 2022 after the
retirement of David Ferriero, who’d served in the post since 2009 and was in
the position when NARA first contacted the Justice Department about missing
presidential records – a process Trump has referred to as a “sham referral.”
Shogan was confirmed by the Senate in May 2023.
Late last
year, Shogan visited the federal courthouse in Washington, D.C., to advocate
for a lengthy sentence for a man who threw powdered paint at the case housing
the original U.S. Constitution, displayed at the National Archives.
Shogan said
the man “intentionally and willfully assaulted our shared past,” describing the
attack as “an emotional buzzsaw” for NARA staffers, who she said view their job
as to “preserve, protect and share the cultural record of the United States.”
Trump said
in a radio interview prior to his inauguration last month that he planned to
dismiss Shogan.


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