US president-elect Donald Trump is promising to replace the head of the National Archives, thrusting the agency back into the political spotlight after his mishandling of sensitive documents led to a federal indictment.
“We will have a new archivist,” Trump told radio host Hugh Hewitt on Monday.
The agency piqued Trump’s ire after it alerted the Department of Justice about potential problems with Trump’s handling of classified documents in early 2022.
That set in motion an investigation that led to a dramatic Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) search of Trump’s home at Mar-a-Lago in Florida, which culminated in him becoming the first former president charged with federal crimes.
The current archivist, Colleen Shogan, the first woman in the role, was not in the post at that time. David Ferriero, who had been appointed by former US president Barack Obama in 2009, announced in January 2022 that he would be retiring effective that April.
Shogan was nominated by US President Joe Biden in August 2022, just days before the FBI search at Mar-a-Lago, in Palm Beach, Florida. But she was not confirmed until May of the following year, after a months-long partisan battle over the agency’s role in the documents investigation.
The national archivist can be removed from office by the president, who can choose a successor who is then confirmed by the Senate, so Trump’s promise to do so is not unusual.