In a stunning Friday outburst that blindsided even his closest advisers, President Donald Trump declared that any document ever signed by former President Joe Biden using an autopen “is hereby terminated,” instantly throwing Washington’s legal machinery into panic.
The White House, federal agencies, and Biden-era officials now face a tidal wave of uncertainty, as no one knows which executive orders Trump is targeting—or how he is determining their legitimacy.
Some insiders fear critical national policies could be wiped out overnight, while others whisper that this may be only the first strike in a much larger political war to come… and the next revelation, according to sources, will be even more explosive.
The moment the words left Trump’s mouth, Washington entered one of its most chaotic legal frenzies in recent memory.
The announcement—delivered during an unplanned on-camera moment just before Trump boarded Marine One—was not part of any prepared remarks.
Aides later admitted they had no idea he intended to make such a sweeping, undefined declaration.
One staffer, speaking on background, said they believed Trump “simply snapped” after reading a morning intelligence briefing referencing Biden’s past reliance on an autopen during periods of travel or medical rest.
The problem, however, is that Biden’s use of an autopen was neither secret nor unprecedented.
Autopens have been used by both Democratic and Republican presidents alike for decades, typically for routine matters or urgent signatures when the president cannot be physically present.
Biden was no exception.
So when Trump declared all autopen-signed documents “terminated,” legal experts immediately scrambled to calculate the magnitude of what that might mean.
And the early estimates are staggering.

Within hours, a memo—later leaked—circulated through multiple federal agencies warning that dozens, possibly hundreds, of executive actions could be affected.
Those include Biden-era directives on cybersecurity, infrastructure grants, veterans’ benefits, pandemic response procedures, environmental rules, and foreign aid authorizations.
While many of these orders have already been implemented for months or even years, Trump’s ambiguous proclamation raised a disturbing question:
Can a sitting president retroactively invalidate actions taken by his predecessor based solely on the method of signature?
“Legally, it’s unprecedented,” said one former Justice Department official.
“The president is asserting a retroactive nullification power that no court has ever recognized. If taken literally, it could dismantle years of governmental activity.”
At the same time, Trump’s supporters hailed the move as a bold strike at what they see as bureaucratic overreach.
Conservative commentators quickly framed the issue around “authenticity,” arguing that Biden’s use of an autopen symbolized “lazy governance” and “unaccountable policymaking.”
Yet even some of Trump’s allies admitted privately that they were caught totally off guard.
One adviser, speaking anonymously, acknowledged that no legal review had been completed before the president’s remarks:
“We’re still trying to figure out what he meant. The agencies are calling nonstop. They want clarification, and we don’t have any.”
The White House attempted to soften the blow in a late-evening press release describing Trump’s statement as “the beginning of a broader review into improper or unverifiable presidential signatures issued between 2021 and 2024.”
But the explanation raised far more questions than it resolved.
What counts as “improper”?
Why “unverifiable”?
Who decides which orders fall into the category?
No one seemed to know—not the agencies, not Congress, not even Trump’s own cabinet officials.
Meanwhile, Biden-era appointees who remain in career positions reported a “wave of internal panic.”
One described the atmosphere as “worse than the shutdown and worse than the transition chaos—it felt like the ground under us suddenly cracked open.”
Some insiders speculated that Trump’s move was deliberately designed to freeze or slow government functions by creating uncertainty over the validity of past directives.
Others believe the strategy may be personal—Trump has long criticized Biden’s reliance on delegation and has openly questioned whether “Biden even knew what he was signing.”
Still others see the announcement as part of a broader plan to reshape the federal bureaucracy by unraveling Biden’s legacy piece by piece.
But the true chaos erupted on Capitol Hill.
Within an hour of Trump’s remarks, congressional Democrats began demanding emergency hearings, accusing the President of attempting to “erase history through a technicality.”
Several warned that Trump’s declaration could disrupt Social Security payments, veterans’ benefits, or federal loan programs if any of those relied—even partially—on autopen-signed orders.
Republicans, however, were split.
Some praised Trump’s boldness, calling it “a necessary corrective to Biden’s absentee presidency.”
Others privately expressed alarm that Trump had set off a chain reaction with no apparent plan or legal foundation.
One Republican senator was overheard telling a colleague:
“This is going to end up at the Supreme Court. And fast.”
The Justice Department remained silent, fueling speculation that Trump may have bypassed them altogether.
Legal scholars predicted a wave of lawsuits from advocacy groups, states, and even corporations potentially affected by the sudden uncertainty.
But perhaps the most explosive part of the story came late Friday night, when multiple administration sources claimed that Trump may be preparing to reveal a list of Biden executive actions he considers “fraudulent” or “questionably authorized.”

According to two insiders, the list could include foreign-policy decisions, federal contract approvals, and even certain pandemic directives.
One official familiar with the discussions said the pending revelation “will cause an earthquake” if released.
Another put it more bluntly:
“If he publishes that list, Washington might not function normally for months.”
The Biden camp responded with controlled anger.
A spokesperson called Trump’s remarks “unhinged, legally meaningless, and factually ignorant,” insisting that all autopen-signed orders were fully authorized, fully vetted, and fully constitutional.
But behind the scenes, former Biden staffers acknowledged real concern.
Several admitted that while autopens are perfectly legal, the optics—and political vulnerability—are severe.
“Trump knows exactly what he’s doing,” said one former senior official.
“He’s not fighting the autopen. He’s fighting Biden’s legitimacy.”
Federal lawyers, meanwhile, scrambled to assess what might happen if Trump attempted to enforce his declaration.
Could agencies simply ignore Biden-era rules until receiving clarification?
Could Trump issue a blanket executive order invalidating past autopen-signed documents?
Experts warned that doing so might paralyze critical programs and spark a constitutional confrontation unlike anything seen in modern history.
One constitutional scholar said:
“If Trump claims authority to retroactively void presidential actions, we are entering a legal gray zone so deep that Congress and the courts will have to intervene.”
Others suggested that Trump may be intentionally blurring the lines, using ambiguity as leverage.
By refusing to specify which documents he considers invalid, he keeps both agencies and political opponents off balance.
And, as several aides quietly admitted, Trump thrives in the chaos.
Late into the night, rumors continued to swirl inside Washington’s power circles.
Some whispered that Trump’s comment was merely a “test balloon” for a more sweeping initiative to overhaul how executive power is validated.
Others believe he may be preparing to delegitimize broad portions of Biden’s presidency ahead of upcoming policy battles.
But the most unsettling whispers came from those closest to Trump—those who claim this “autopen termination” is only phase one.
One adviser hinted cryptically:
“If people think today was shocking, they have no idea what’s coming next.”
Another added:
“There’s a reason he mentioned legitimacy. He’s building toward something.”
What exactly that “something” is remains unclear.
But as Washington braces for the next wave, one thing is certain:
Trump’s unexpected declaration has opened a new and volatile chapter in the political struggle between administrations past and present.
And according to sources inside the West Wing, the next revelation—whenever it arrives—will redefine the fight in ways no one in Washington is prepared for.