A quiet but serious battle is happening inside the halls of the government, and it’s one that could change how we remember American history. The Trump administration is currently making moves to limit the public’s access to official records, leading historians and watchdogs to sound the alarm. They aren’t worried about missing paperwork; they’re worried that the government is trying to “privatize” the American story.
The Presidential Records Act (which says presidential documents belong to the public) and the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) (which lets citizens request government info). According to a recent Axios report, the administration is now challenging the very core of these rules.
Deleting the Digital Trail
For decades, presidents have been required to save their communications so future generations can understand how decisions were made. But the rules seem to be changing: White House staffers are reportedly no longer required to save text messages unless they are the “sole record” of a decision. This is a huge shift from how things were handled in the past. The Justice Department recently issued a memo claiming the Presidential Records Act, a law created after the Watergate scandal, is actually unconstitutional.

The “Burden” Argument
The administration claims that saving every text is a “technological burden,” even though the National Archives has tools to do it automatically. It’s not just about what is being saved, it’s about what is being shared. People who try to get information through FOIA requests say they are hitting a brick wall.
In one case, a researcher was told it would take an extra 620 days to release a simple 19-page memo. Watchdogs say agencies are claiming they have “no records” on topics where it seems impossible for no paperwork to exist.
The administration has dismissed numerous FOIA officers, creating a massive backlog that makes it harder for the press and the public to get answers.
Controlling the Narrative
Historians are worried that if the government gets to decide which records to keep and which to toss, they get to write their own version of history. Sarah Weicksel of the American Historical Association points out that if you limit the evidence, you control the story.
The White House says they are committed to a “rigorous records retention program” and that staff undergoes training, but many say the actions on the ground tell a different story. They argue that by erasing the “paper trail,” the government is making it impossible for the public to know if their leaders are actually serving them.
History Shouldn’t Have a “Delete” Button
This feels like a deliberate attempt to turn off the lights. In a democracy, the records of the government don’t belong to the President; they belong to us. When an administration decides that its text messages are too much of a “burden” to save, they are essentially saying that accountability is a burden.
We live in a digital age. Saving a text message is significantly easier than filing a paper memo in a cabinet, so the “technological burden” excuse feels incredibly thin. What’s really scary here is the idea of “curated history.” If a leader can choose to delete the parts of the record that make them look bad, we lose the truth. We’ve seen this happen in other parts of the world, and it never leads to more freedom. Transparency isn’t just a “nice to have”, it’s the only way we can be sure our government is doing what it says it’s doing. If we let the White House decide what becomes part of the “American story,” we aren’t a country with a history anymore, we’re a country with a PR campaign.
Should the President have the power to decide which of his records the public gets to see, or does that power belong to the people?





