UMVA has learned that President Trump used a high‑stakes cabinet meeting on May 27, 2026, to launch a blistering attack on the Biden administration’s effort to conceal a cache of ghostwriter interview tapes.
When asked by LindellTV’s Cara Castronuova whether the recordings should see the light of day, Trump’s voice rose with anger, “I would like to see what he has to say because we can never allow what happened to this country to happen again.” He called the president “grossly incompetent” and derided the Democrats as “Dumocrats” whose policies had nearly shattered the nation.
Turning his focus to Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche, Trump urged swift action, “I hope you’re able to produce that. It would be very interesting reading for people.” He signaled a demand that Biden’s lawsuit to block the tapes be dismissed and that the recordings be released to the public.
Sources have confirmed to UMVA that the Biden legal team filed a suit against the Justice Department, alleging constitutional grounds for keeping the tapes hidden. The move follows a controversial classified‑documents probe that linked the recordings to a former special counsel’s investigation.
The probe had previously concluded that Biden “willfully retained” classified material but declined to press charges, describing him as a “sympathetic, well‑meaning, elderly man with a poor memory.” Critics argue the tapes reveal a troubling lack of capacity to fulfill the duties of Commander‑in‑Chief.
After the Freedom of Information Act request filed by the Heritage Foundation was rebuffed, the Trump‑appointed Justice Department announced it would comply with the demand and release the audio on June 15, delivering a potentially explosive glimpse into the former president’s private reflections.
In a fiery response to Biden’s lawsuit, Trump labeled the president a “crooked politician,” insisting that any attempt to silence the tapes was an affront to transparency and the American people.