Tue. Nov 5th, 2024
Occasional Digest - a story for you

  • The National Archives has been running without a permanent leader since May.
  • Senators did not confirm Colleen Shogan last year when Republicans voted against her..
  • Biden has re-nominated Shogan, but senators show little urgency to confirm her.

WASHINGTON – Weeks after the FBI searched former President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate for classified records in August, a government historian sat before senators on Capitol Hill seeking to run the embattled agency responsible for preserving the records that ended up at the Florida resort.

President Joe Biden’s nominee to be National Archivist, Colleen Shogan, would be the first woman to permanently run the underfunded National Archives and Records Administration, where longstanding challenges in recovering classified documents raised worries about national security risks. 

Despite Shogan’s vows to fix the problems, a key Senate panel did not advance her nomination to a full Senate vote after Republicans on the panel attacked her as an “extreme partisan” in the heated September hearing overshadowed by the recent search of Trump’s home. The panel’s leading Democrat then vowed to work with leadership to advance her nomination, but it did not move forward.



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