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The Guardian - US
The Guardian - US
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Richard Luscombe

Trump ‘knowingly put national security at risk’ by stashing classified documents, Schiff says – as it happened

Pages from a Department of Justice court filing in response to a request from Trump’s legal team for a special master to review the documents seized during the search.
Pages from a Department of Justice court filing in response to a request from Trump’s legal team for a special master to review the documents seized during the search. Photograph: Jon Elswick/AP

Closing summary

We’re closing the US politics blog now, thanks for joining us.

Donald Trump put the security of the country at risk by illegally stashing highly classified documents at his Florida residence and lying about having them, senior Democrat Adam Schiff said.

The California congressman was among a number of political figures reacting Wednesday to the sensational justice department court filing stating its opposition to the former president’s request for an independent “special master” to oversee the investigation into his hoarding.

Trump claims without evidence he “declassified” the documents before leaving office, an assertion the justice department is seeking to debunk.

Here’s what else we followed today:

  • Bloomberg News reported that federal prosecutors are likely to wait until after the November election to announce any charges against Trump, if they determine he broke laws. But the news website says it’s not clear a determination will have been made by then.

  • There will be enough Covid-19 boosters for everyone who wants one, the White House says, after the FDA approved shots of new multi-variant vaccines. White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said shots could be in arms as early as next week.

  • Secretary of state Antony Blinken paid tribute to former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, who died aged 91, as “a man who changed the course of human history”. Jean-Pierre said it was not decided if the government would send a representative to Gorbachev’s funeral in Russia, especially since most administration officials are banned from the country.

  • Charlie Crist, who last week won the Democratic nomination for governor of Florida, resigned from Congress on Wednesday to concentrate on his campaign to try to unseat Republican Ron DeSantis.

Please join us again tomorrow as Joe Biden prepares to deliver a primetime address to the country on “saving the soul of our nation”.

White House: enough new Covid vaccines for all who want them

The Biden administration says there will be enough Covid-19 boosters for everyone who wants one, and that shots of the new multi-variant vaccines approved by the FDA this morning could start going into arms as soon as next week.

White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said at an afternoon briefing that both the both the Moderna and Pfizer/BioNTech retooled vaccines targeting the BA.4/BA.5 Omicron coronavirus subvariants will shortly be shipped to “tens of thousands” of sites nationwide.

White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre speaks to reporters on Wednesday.
White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre speaks to reporters on Wednesday. Photograph: Oliver Contreras/EPA

She said the last step was final authorization from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) which she indicated was imminent:

Teams are have already started the process of packing and shipping doses across the country and pending CDC action we expect shots in arms to begin in earnest starting after Labor Day weekend.

We’ve been working with providers, clinics, clinicians, local health departments and other critical groups, and we’ve been doing all of this preparation despite the lack of funding from Congress.

She answered “yes” when asked directly if there would be enough vaccines for anyone who wants, or needs one.

Karine Jean-Pierre is more comfortable talking about Joe Biden’s prime time address to the country on Thursday night entitled “the battle for the soul of the nation”, although she says she won’t “get ahead” of his comments.

But she is happy to talk about the rightwing ‘Make America Great Again’ wing of the Republican party that Biden has taken to attacking in recent weeks, and will no doubt go after again tomorrow night in Philadelphia:

The president thinks there is an extremist threat to our democracy. He is as clear as he can be on that when we talk about democracy, when we talk about our freedoms.

The way that he sees it, the Maga Republicans are the most energized part of the Republican Party. That extremism is an extreme threat to our democracy, our freedom to our rights. They just don’t respect the rule of law.

The president is not going to shy away, to call out what he clearly sees is happening in this country. We’re calling it the soul of the nation. He takes it very seriously when it comes to our democracy.

Updated

Other reporters will try, but White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre has just shot down the first question about the justice department’s filing in the Donald Trump classified documents investigation at her afternoon briefing.

Had Joe Biden seen the photo of secret papers strewn on Trump’s floor at Mar-a-Lago, his Florida residence? Has the president been briefed on the status of the inquiry?

Jean-Pierre was resolute:

As I’ve said many times… we’re just not going to comment on the investigation. Anything, any underlying pieces of investigation, any content of the investigation.

This is an ongoing, as you all know, investigation of the department of justice. We are not going to politically interfere, we are not going to comment on anything connected to the investigation. And we’re just going to keep it there.

So that’s a no, then.

Updated

Another one of the former president’s men has appeared before the special grand jury sitting in Georgia.

The grand jury is hearing evidence related to allegations that Donald Trump illegally attempted to overturn the state’s 2020 presidential election result and prevent Joe Biden from taking power.

John Eastman follows hot on the heels of Rudy Giuliani in making an appearance in that case.

In addition to utilizing his right against self-incrimination, Eastman, who was part of Trump’s campaign to stay in office despite losing the November 2020 election, the one-time lawyer to Trump also invoked invoked attorney-client privilege his non-response to some questions asked today in the criminal investigation.

Eastman “is one of a group of Trump allies who were subpoenaed by that panel, which is hearing testimony in Atlanta,” CNBC noted.

The Guardian’s Chris McGreal reported at the weekend that of all the legal investigations into Trump and his business, in Washington, DC, New York and Florida, the Georgia case might have him in the greatest legal peril.

Here’s John Eastman on January 6, 2021.

Attorney John Eastman (left) speaks next to then-president Donald Trump's personal attorney Rudy Giuliani, as Trump supporters gather ahead of the president’s speech to claim that Joe Biden did not beat him to the presidency, in Washington, DC, on January 6, 2021, shortly before Trump urged the crowd to march to the US Capitol, where the mob invaded to try to stop Congress certifying Biden’s win.
Attorney John Eastman (left) speaks next to then-president Donald Trump's personal attorney Rudy Giuliani, as Trump supporters gather ahead of the president’s speech to claim that Joe Biden did not beat him to the presidency, in Washington, DC, on January 6, 2021, shortly before Trump urged the crowd to march to the US Capitol, where the mob invaded to try to stop Congress certifying Biden’s win. Photograph: Jim Bourg/Reuters

Bloomberg: no Trump charges until after midterms

Bloomberg is reporting that federal prosecutors are likely to wait until after the November election to announce any charges against Donald Trump, if they determine he broke laws.

The news website cites “people familiar” with the justice department’s investigations into the former president, one over his efforts to overturn his 2020 election defeat to Joe Biden, and the more recent inquiry into his improper retention of top secret documents at his Florida residence.

“Under long-standing department policy, prosecutors are barred from taking investigative steps or filing charges for the purpose of affecting an election or helping a candidate or party, traditionally 60 days before an election,” Bloomberg says.

“This year, that would be by Sept 10, which makes it unlikely anything would be announced until after November 8.”

Bloomberg said its sources asked to remain anonymous when speaking about potential justice department actions.

It further notes that it is not clear if any of the investigations into Trump will have reached the point by November that a decision on charging him could be made.

Blinken: Gorbachev 'changed course of human history'

Secretary of state Antony Blinken paid tribute to former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, who died aged 91, as “a man who changed the course of human history”.

Mikhail Gorbachev.
Mikhail Gorbachev. Photograph: Liu Heung Shing/AP

In a statement posted to the state department’s website, Blinken gave Gorbachev credit for several “massive achievements” of the last century – including the end of the Cold War, the fall of the Berlin Wall and reductions in nuclear arms:

We join people around the world in mourning the passing of Mikhail Gorbachev. Perhaps no word is more closely associated with Mr Gorbachev than glasnost, or openness. That’s fitting for a man whose openness changed the course of human history.

Mr Gorbachev was open to acknowledging his country’s history – not just its triumphs, but its tragedies – what he called the ‘blank spots’ of the Soviet Union’s past. He created space for dissenting views, and freed dissidents who had spent years in exile or prison. He was also open to working with other nations, including adversaries like the United States, driven by the conviction that dialogue was in the interest of his people – and all people.

It’s tempting to see the massive achievements of that engagement – including the end of the Cold War, the fall of the Berlin Wall, the first-ever agreement to reduce the nuclear arsenals of the US and USSR – as inevitable. But those achievements would have been unimaginable without the courage and determination Mr Gorbachev brought to his pursuit of openness, and the trust he built with presidents Ronald Reagan and George HW Bush.

He never lost faith in the transformative power of such engagement, even as some of his greatest accomplishments were weakened. In 2018, he wrote, ‘Is it too late to return to dialogue and negotiations? I don’t want to lose hope … We must not resign, we must not surrender’.

He was right, and his life is a powerful reminder of all that can be achieved when we make those ideals a reality.

Updated

Trump: I 'declassified' seized top secret documents

Donald Trump is repeating his assertion, debunked in the justice department’s legal filing, that he “declassified” the top secret documents seized by the FBI in their raid on his Florida home.

Among a series of posts by the former president on his favored Truth Social platform on Wednesday, he also accused federal agents of “haphazardly” scattering the documents on the floor to photograph them:

Terrible the way the FBI, during the Raid of Mar-a-Lago, threw documents haphazardly all over the floor (perhaps pretending it was me that did it!), and then started taking pictures of them for the public to see.

Thought they wanted them kept Secret? Lucky I Declassified!

As the Guardian’s Hugo Lowell reports, Trump has produced no paperwork that might confirm the insistence of himself and allies that he issued some sort of a standing order when he was president that any materials he took to Mar-a-Lago were declassified.

The justice department, meanwhile, noted in the filing that at no time in the months during which national archives officials were seeking the documents’ return did Trump’s lawyers make any argument he declassified them.

Trump’s predictable response echoes the reaction on Wednesday by Republicans, at least those willing to comment publicly. They attacked the FBI and justice department, and glossed over the fact that numerous top secret documents were recovered, some in his desk, after Trump’s legal team claimed a “diligent search” had failed to yield any.

Vocal Trump acolyte Kristi Noem, the Republican governor of South Dakota, told Fox and Friends: “The one thing I’ve heard across this country Republicans, Democrats, the public, they don’t trust the [department of justice] and they want this to be transparent.

“Hiding these documents and this information, keeping it within the DoJ is wrong. It needs to be transparent so people can start to build trust back in the FBI and the DoJ and what they’re doing”.

Donald Trump boasted to close associates that he knew secrets about Emmanuel Macron’s sex life from US intelligence sources, it has been reported.

The report in Rolling Stone magazine comes in the wake of the release of court documents on the classified and national defence documents found in a search of Trump’s Mar-a-Lago home on 8 August, which mention a file referred to as “info re: President of France”.

Emmanuel Macron.
Emmanuel Macron. Photograph: Bertrand Guay/AFP/Getty Images

It is unclear whether the file on Macron was classified or what it contained. But Rolling Stone claimed that its mention in the official inventory of what was seized at Mar-a-Lago caused a “transatlantic freakout” between Paris and Washington.

A French embassy spokesperson said: “We do not comment on legal proceedings in the US and … the embassy has not asked the administration for any information concerning the documents retrieved at former President Trump’s residence.”

Neither the state department nor Trump’s office have so far responded to a request for comment.

The Rolling Stone report said that during and after his presidency, Trump claimed to some of his closest associates that he knew details of Macron’s private life, which he had gleaned from “intelligence” he had seen or been briefed on.

Macron initially courted Trump, inviting him to the Bastille Day military parade in 2017 just two months after he was elected, inspiring the US president to badger his own generals to stage a similar show of military pageantry in Washington.

Relations soon soured between the two leaders, particularly after Macron’s failure to persuade Trump to stay in the nuclear deal with Iran. Trump took the US out of the deal in 2018, and it has unravelled since then.

Read the full story:

Schiff: Trump 'put national security at risk'

Adam Schiff, a senior Democrat who led the first House impeachment of Donald Trump, says the former president and his allies “knowingly put our national security at risk” by stashing highly classified documents at his Florida residence.

The California congressman gave his assessment in a series of Tweets following the justice department’s legal filing that suggests Trump obstructed an investigation into his improper retention of the documents, lied about having them and tried to conceal them.

“The legal arguments are compelling, but what is most striking are the facts outlining how the former president and his team knowingly put our national security at risk,” Schiff wrote.

“This is Trump’s counsel swearing there were no more classified documents at Mar-a-Lago. That was obviously false. Someone isn’t telling the truth,” he posted alongside an image of the filing in which Trump’s team claims a “diligent search” failed to turn up documents later recovered by the FBI.

“It’s no wonder they wouldn’t allow a look inside the boxes - there were still lots of classified documents at Mar-a-Lago [Trump’s Palm Beach residence and resort].

“The deception was deliberate. The government found classified papers in multiple locations throughout Mar-a-Lago, a public hotel. Considering the secret markings, this is reckless in the extreme”.

Most damning of all, Schiff added, the documents “so sensitive, so protected that senior FBI agents and DOJ attorneys couldn’t even initially review them. [They] were kept at a public resort. Potentially available to God knows who”.

It is not the first time Schiff, a frequent critic of Trump, has accused him of selling out his country. During his fiery closing argument to Trump’s first Senate trial in February 2020, Schiff, the House impeachment manager, said: “He has betrayed our national security, and he will do so again.

“You can’t trust this president to do the right thing. Not for one minute, not for one election, not for the sake of our country. You just can’t. He will not change and you know it”.

The Republican majority in the Senate subsequently acquitted Trump of obstructing Congress and abuse of power.

Crist resigns from House to prepare for DeSantis fight

Charlie Crist, who last week won the Democratic nomination for governor of Florida, resigned from Congress on Wednesday to concentrate on his campaign to try to unseat Republican Ron DeSantis.

Crist, himself a former Florida governor as a Republican, was House representative for St Petersburg, on the state’s west coast where he has his campaign headquarters, since 2017.

Charlie Crist.
Charlie Crist. Photograph: Chris O’Meara/AP

He told the Tampa Bay Times in a brief statement that his resignation from Washington DC would be effective at the end of Wednesday.

He gave no reason for his decision, but there are fewer than 10 weeks left before the November election in which he faces an uphill battle to topple DeSantis, a popular figure in Republican circles for his “culture war” agenda and a likely candidate for the party’s nomination in the 2024 presidential election.

Representing the people of his district, Crist said, was “an honor and a privilege”.

His resignation erodes Democrats’ working majority in the House, i.e. only voting members, to just three votes.

As a first-time presidential candidate, Donald Trump repeatedly demanded that Hillary Clinton be sent to jail. “Lock her up” emerged as a battle cry for the 45th president and his fans. He also pledged that his presidency would properly handle the nation’s secrets.

“In my administration, I’m going to enforce all laws concerning the protection of classified information,” Trump intoned at a 2016 rally in North Carolina. “No one will be above the law.” As promises go, this one aged badly – much like his commitment to release his tax returns.

On Tuesday night, the government filed its 36-page opposition to the ex-reality-show host’s demand that a special master be appointed. (A special master is an independent mediator appointed to go through documents and determine which may be protected by privilege.)

Trump’s gambit backfired, however. Once again, he looks like a liar. Beyond that, his lawyers became his lackeys. Christina Bobb meet William Barr.

Donald Trump’s former White House counselor, Kellyanne Conway, does not think Republicans should move on from her former boss, despite signs his control of the party could cost it the chance to take Congress in November.

Kellyanne Conway.
Kellyanne Conway. Photograph: Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

Speaking to Fox News on Tuesday, Conway said: “Those who want to move on from Trump: You go first.”

Democrats are increasingly confident they can capitalize on Trump’s dominance of the Republican party, their own legislative successes and the need to protect abortion rights and hold the House and Senate.

So much so, they have controversially boosted extremist Trump-endorsed candidates, including election deniers, in order to give independents and Republican moderates a stark choice at the polls.

But Conway, who remains close to Trump, doubled down on the appeal of the Trumpist agenda.

“Anytime Democrats tell you which Republican should be your nominee, run in the other direction, because they know that they’re fixing to make that person unpalatable,” she said.

Democrats think Trump and his supporters are unpalatable given his refusal to admit defeat in 2020 and his lie about electoral fraud; his legal jeopardy on that front and over his business affairs; and his furious reaction to an FBI search at his Mar-a-Lago home, over his retention of classified White House material.

Democrats have performed strongly in special elections, particularly by focusing on the supreme court’s removal of the right to abortion. In conservative Kansas, a ballot measure came out in favor of the right to choose. In key Senate races including Pennsylvania, Ohio, Arizona and Georgia, Trump-backed candidates are struggling.

Conway claimed voters were aligned with Republicans on key issues. Those obsessed with Trump, she said, “don’t spend a minute learning what the 74 million Trump-Pence voters want in these midterm elections. That’s what I study every single day.”

More than 74 million Americans voted for Trump and Mike Pence in 2020. Unsaid by Conway: more than 81 million voted for Joe Biden.

Read more here:

The US National Security Agency (NSA) tried to persuade its British counterpart to stop the Guardian publishing revelations about secret mass data collection from the NSA contractor, Edward Snowden, according to a new book.

Sir Iain Lobban, the head of Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ), was reportedly called with the request in the early hours of 6 June 2013 but rebuffed the suggestion that his agency should act as a censor on behalf of its US partner in electronic spying.

Edward Snowden.
Edward Snowden. Photograph: Edward Snowden/The Guardian

The late-night call and the British refusal to shut down publication of the leaks was the first of several episodes in which the Snowden affair caused rifts within the Five Eyes signals intelligence coalition, recounted in a new book to be published on Thursday, The Secret History of Five Eyes, by film-maker and investigative journalist Richard Kerbaj.

According to Kerbaj, Lobban was aware of the importance of the particularly special relationship between the US and UK intelligence agencies but thought “the proposition of urging a newspaper to spike the article for the sake of the NSA seemed a step too far”.

“It was neither the purpose of his agency nor his own to deal with the NSA’s public relations,” Kerbaj writes.

In October 2013, the then prime minister, David Cameron, later threatened the use of injunctions or other “tougher measures” to stop further publication of Snowden’s leaks about the mass collection of phone and internet communications by the NSA and GCHQ. However, the DA-Notice committee, the body which alerts the UK media to the potential damage a story might cause to national security, told the Guardian at the time that nothing it had published had put British lives at risk.

In the new book, Kerbaj reports that the US-UK intelligence relationship was further strained when the head of the NSA, Gen Keith Alexander, failed to inform Lobban that the Americans had identified Snowden, a Hawaii-based government contractor, as the source of the stories, leaving the British agency investigating its own ranks in the search for the leaker. GCHQ did not discover Snowden’s identity until he went public in a Guardian interview.

‘It was a chilling reminder of how important you are, or how important you’re not,” a senior British intelligence insider is quoted as saying in the book.

Read the full story:

Here’s a quick aside from politics news: the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has authorized new Covid-19 booster shots by both Moderna and Pfizer/BioNTech to tackle widely circulating Omicron subvariants of the coronavirus.

As well as the currently dominant BA4 and BA5 subvariants, both single-dose booster vaccines also cover the original version of the virus targeted by all previous Covid shots.

As a single dose, Moderna’s vaccine is authorized for those aged 18 and above. Pfizer’s Bivalent vaccine is for those aged 12 and above.

The US government has purchased 175m doses of the booster shots in an effort to stave off the worst effects of a potential surge in new infections as schools reconvene and people spend more time indoors as the weather grows colder.

Read more:

A number of media outlets made a new attempt Wednesday to persuade a judge to unseal more court records tied to the FBI’s search of Donald Trump’s Florida estate, Reuters reports.

The request came hours after the justice department outlined publicly for the first time evidence it obtained that Trump may have tried to obstruct its investigation by deliberately concealing documents.

The news outlets, including ABC, the Associated Press, CNN, CBS, NBC, the New York Times and Washington Post, asked district court judge Aileen Cannon to make public two other records that the justice department also separately filed under seal earlier on Tuesday.

One is a more detailed receipt of the property the FBI seized from Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate, which included 33 items and boxes containing more than 100 records with classification markings.

The other is a document that will have more details about the status of the department’s “filter” review, in which agents not involved in the investigation weed through the documents to separate anything possibly covered by attorney-client privilege.

Arizona voting rights referendum struck down

A referendum that would enact sweeping voting rights protections in Arizona won’t appear on the ballot this fall after a ruling from the state’s supreme court.

Included in the expansive measure was a provision that would have barred the state from making changes to the selection of presidential electors in a presidential election year, a concern after Donald Trump’s efforts to overturn the 2020 election results there.

Arizona governor Doug Ducey.
Arizona governor Doug Ducey. Photograph: Ross D Franklin/AP

It would have also prohibited third-party audits, like the highly criticized one that took place in Maricopa county last year, and restored a widely-used permanent early voting list that allows voters to automatically receive a mail-in ballot. Republicans changed state law recently to make it easier to remove voters from the list.

The Arizona supreme court on Friday sided with groups who had challenged the number of valid signatures on the ballot. Proponents of the measure turned in more than 475,000 signatures, nearly double the 238,000 required to make the ballot.

Ultimately, enough signatures were invalidated that the measure fell 1,458 short. Kory Langhofer, an attorney representing the Arizona Free Enterprise Club, a group that challenged the signatures, told the New York Times about 20,000 of them were duplicates.

Stacy Pearson, a spokesperson for the group supporting the measure, told the Arizona Republic the court’s action was “unprecedented.” She also expressed alarm that the court, which Arizona’s Republican governor Doug Ducey and the state legislature expanded in 2016, was invalidating so many signatures.

“What we’re seeing here is the result of 20 years of Republican efforts to chip away at democracy in Arizona,” she told the Times.

According to the Arizona Republic, The groups that challenged the measure also included the Honest Elections Project, which is linked to Leonard Leo, one of the most influential figures in the conservative movement, and Restoring Integrity and Trust in Elections, a group founded by former president George W Bush and former attorney general William Barr.

Some analysts believe the justice department has struck a balance between needing to prove the weakness of Donald Trump’s legal argument for a special master, and showing too much of its hand over its investigation into the former president’s improper handling of classified documents.

But Carl Tobias, Williams chair in law at the University of Richmond’s school of law, warns not to expect an immediate resolution to the legal wrangling, which continues in district court in Palm Beach on Thursday, when judge Aileen Cannon will mull both sides’ arguments.

“The next step is a written response from Trump and his counsel, which is likely to deny all the ideas that department of justice meticulously stated in its filing,” he said.

“Judge Cannon, a Trump appointee, will ask them questions. The judge is unlikely to rule from the bench, and she will probably take the case under advisement and review all of the written and oral arguments and issue a ruling asap.

“The department of justice has made a very persuasive case so far about its need for the documents and the need to retrieve them, because of the delay and litigation engaged in by Trump and his counsel. DoJ has a delicate balancing act to show that Trump’s special master request is weak while preserving the integrity of this probe and many other investigations past and future.

“It seems to have achieved that balance by showing that Trump lacks standing in his case, because he is a former president, the court lacks jurisdiction to hear the case, and the request to name a special master is moot, because the department has reviewed all of the documents, so there is nothing for a special master to do that the judge cannot do by reviewing them.

“If the judge agrees with the DoJ arguments, she will dismiss the case and Trump will probably appeal. If she disagrees with DoJ, she could appoint a special master, but DoJ may appeal her ruling”.

The brouhaha over the justice department’s legal filing stems from Donald Trump’s demand for the appointment of an independent “special master” to review materials seized in the FBI raid on his Florida home.

But exactly what is a special master, who would become one, and what would their role be?

Here’s our handy explainer:

Reaction to the justice department’s filing over Donald Trump’s retention of classified documents came swiftly, and brutally, on Wednesday.

Conservative commentator George Conway, husband of Trump’s former senior adviser Kellyanne Conway, said it was “insanity” that the ex-president’s legal team had gone to a court seeking the appointment of a “special master” to oversee the inquiry, knowing it would likely reveal publicly much of what investigators knew.

“Basically they asked for the justice department to punch them in the face. And that’s what the justice department did in this in this brief,” he told CNN.

“They talk about obstruction... these documents were moved around from room to room. And they actually show us the certification. I don’t think we’ve seen that before, the certification from Trump’s lawyers that said ‘hey, there were no more documents, no more classified documents’ last year in response to a subpoena.

“They certified that’s it: ‘There’s all the responsive documents we have, and it turned out there were no documents anywhere other than in storage rooms.’

“It turned out there were documents at his office. They were documents all over the place, and tons of them. This factual recitation has him dead to rights. There’s just no question about it, and it explains a lot today about why we’re seeing Donald Trump ‘truthing out’ on his social media platform that’s failing. He was basically just freaking out all day and the reason is this.”

Before we get stuck into the reaction coming in over last night’s bombshell justice department filing into former president Donald Trump’s retention of classified documents after he left office, here’s a look at the 36-page document itself:

Good morning, and welcome to our midweek US politics blog. Anybody tired of Donald Trump news yet?

In a stunning overnight court filing in Florida, the justice department has laid out in great detail their conclusions from the FBI search on the former president’s Palm Beach residence earlier this month that garnered a trove of highly classified documents and government records he had no business having.

Among the remarkable findings: some of the documents were found in Trump’s desk drawer; it was “likely” efforts had been made to move and hide them; Trump’s representatives had falsely asserted all documents were returned to the US government when they hadn’t; and that Trump’s team had obstructed and delayed at every opportunity efforts to retrieve them.

The cherry on the cake, so to speak, was a photograph accompanying the filing, redacted but showing a variety of documents and folders, at least six marked secret or top secret, laid out on the floor of Trump’s Mar-a-Lago mansion.

We’ll have plenty of reaction coming through the day. And to get yourself up to speed, read this account by the Guardian’s Hugo Lowell.

Elsewhere today:

  • Trump’s legal team has until this evening to file a response to the justice department filing, ahead of Florida district court judge Aileen Cannon mulling his request on Thursday for the appointment of an independent “special master” to oversee the investigation.

  • It’s a quieter day for Joe Biden after his speech in Pennsylvania on Tuesday laying out his Safer America plan on guns and crime, including his declaration to pursue a new federal assault weapons ban. The president has no scheduled public engagements.

  • Congress is on summer recess. Republicans previously outraged by the FBI raid on Trump’s home have become noticeably quiet.

  • The White House press secretary, Karine Jean-Pierre, will deliver her daily briefing at 2.45pm. She will be asked, but almost certainly deflect, all questions about the justice department filing.

  • US politicians of a certain age are paying tribute to Mikhail Gorbachev, the former Soviet president and architect of the end of the Cold War who has died aged 91.

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