Presidency requires presence. What America got instead was a vacuum—filled by handlers, insiders, and a family with power but no mandate.
While the media obsessed over optics, unelected voices shaped national policy. Cabinet meetings were attended by a former First Lady with no constitutional role. Foreign business interests courted a first son with no portfolio. Decisions flowed, but signatures were questioned. An autopen can authorize documents—but it can’t answer questions. Who wielded it, and why?
The special counsel ruled the president was mentally unfit to stand trial. That ruling now echoes beyond the courtroom. If unfit for prosecution, was he ever fit to govern? If a signature is legally valid, must the signer be competent?
The country deserves transparency—not legacy protection. Power wielded in silence is the most dangerous form of corruption. It’s time to audit the signatures, the decisions, and the power behind the curtain.