National Archives Makes Surprise Announcement, Is This How Biden Goes Down?

The National Archives has made a surprise announcement that should come as a massive blow to Joe Biden and the Biden crime family.

Roughly 1,800 emails will be released to Rep. James Comer of the House Oversight Committee and will no doubt contribute to the ongoing investigation into Joe Biden and the Biden family.

These emails are from Joe Biden’s pseudonymous accounts, why would a President need to use email accounts with fake names? What was Joe Biden trying to hide or obscure?

At roughly the same time this is happening, Hunter Biden is also facing increased scrutiny and a bevy of new charges against him.

By now, it has become very apparent that multiple coalitions and forces in politics seem to be conspiring to remove Biden from office, including from inside the Democrat Party.

The deep state and Democrats seem to have abandoned Biden entirely, we certainly aren’t seeing the same cover they provided for Biden during 2020. Is this how Biden finally goes down?

Mere days ago, the House Oversight Committee announced: “Based on whistleblower testimony, we know Joe Biden used pseudonym email addresses to send and receive email from his son’s associate.”

 

 

 

 

Newsmax reports:

Biden has reportedly used Robert Peters, Robin Ware and JRB Ware, pseudonyms that Republicans say he used to discuss dealings with energy giant Burisma when Hunter Biden was a board member of the Ukrainian firm.

Also among the trove of emails: communications with Eric Schwerin and/or Devon Archer, former business associates of Hunter Biden.

Democrats have long sought to dispel any notion of wrongdoing by the Biden crime family, but this recent announcement from the National Archives completely shatters that obfuscation.

 

 

According to Breitbart:

The 82,000 pages of emails appear to match the previous trove of 5,400 emails and records linked to Joe Biden’s email aliases that NARA revealed in August.

The contents of the emails are unknown. NARA released the total of the pages due to a status report regarding the Southeastern Legal Foundation’s FOIA request.

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