Here’s the latest I can share based on recent reporting.
Core update
- A federal judge ordered White House staff and President Trump’s top advisers to preserve and comply with the Presidential Records Act (PRA). The ruling came in response to challenges to an DOJ opinion that had questioned the PRA’s constitutionality and suggested it didn’t apply to Mr. Trump’s records. The decision reinforces that presidential and certain executive-branch records must be preserved, even as debates about the Act’s scope continue. [CBS News, May 19, 2026][1][2]
Key context
- The PRA, enacted in 1978 after Watergate, governs custody and management of presidential records, with the president and certain parts of the Executive Office of the President responsible for preservation while in office. Personal, purely private records remain excluded. [CBS News overview of PRA scope][2]
- The DOJ memorandum previously argued the PRA could be unconstitutional on separation-of-powers grounds, prompting lawsuits from historians and watchdog groups seeking court orders to enforce preservation. The court’s injunction aims to ensure timely preservation and accountability. [CBS News reporting on the DOJ memo and lawsuits][2]
What this means going forward
- The injunction applies to most White House employees and senior advisers, mandating preservation of both presidential and vice-presidential records covered by the PRA. This reinforces public access expectations and oversight, at least for the records within PRA’s scope. [CBS News coverage][2]
- The PRA’s reach remains a point of contention in broader debates about executive privilege, classification, and the balance between public records laws and presidential prerogatives. Expect continued legal developments and potential further appeals or clarifications from courts or Congress. [context from PRA discussions][8][9]
Sources you can check for updates
- CBS News coverage of the May 19, 2026 ruling and related DOJ memo discussions.[1][2]
- Archives/official PRA overview for background on scope and exemptions.[8]
If you’d like, I can pull the latest updates from additional outlets or provide a brief explainer of how PRA defines “presidential records” versus private records, with a simple timeline of key rulings.