
Trump’s autopen fixation, explained
CNN
President Donald Trump first focused on Joe Biden’s use of the autopen in March, leaning into the idea that the former president’s use of the tool to sign documents showed that he wasn’t in charge while in the White House and that his actions were “null and void.”
President Donald Trump first focused on Joe Biden’s use of the autopen in March, leaning into the idea that the former president’s use of the tool to sign documents showed that he wasn’t in charge while in the White House and that his actions were “null and void.” At the time, conservative executive authority scholar John Yoo wagered to CNN that Trump was “just having fun at Biden’s expense.” Trump on Wednesday sought to take this outside the realm of mere “fun.” He ordered an investigation of Biden’s use of the autopen and its supposed links to Biden’s “cognitive decline.” The move is guaranteed to breathe even more life into a story that has proven to be catnip for conservative media eager to keep the focus on the alleged coverup of Biden’s decline. And Trump has certainly shown a talent for seeding baseless conspiracy theories for political gain (see: birtherism and the false notion that the 2020 election was rigged, among them.) But it’s difficult to see how this leads anywhere, for a few reasons. The first is that there is nothing evidently wrong or unlawful about using the autopen.

Texas judge orders Attorney General Ken Paxton’s divorce records unsealed amid heated Senate primary
Court documents detailing the divorce of Republican U.S. Senate candidate and Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton and his wife, state Sen. Angela Paxton, were released Friday by order of a judge, months after she filed citing “biblical grounds.”












