WASHINGTON—Today, the Task Force on the Declassification of Federal Secrets, chaired by Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (R-Fla.), held a hearing on the JFK files. At the hearing, members underscored the significance of newly declassified documents related to President John F. Kennedy’s assassination and criticized past government efforts to withhold this information from the public. Members and witnesses discussed new information contained in the JFK files released by the Trump Administration and identified tranches of documents that still require declassification. Members concluded that more transparency about the JFK files will help restore trust in American institutions and help prevent such an event from happening again.
Key Takeaways:
The U.S. federal government has a history of not being forthcoming with the American people about the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, which has sowed distrust in American institutions.
President Trump and his administration are committed to maximum transparency and have declassified 80,000 pages of records related to President Kennedy’s assassination.
More transparency about federal secrets, like the JFK files, is needed. The Task Force on the Declassification of Federal Secrets will continue to work with the Trump Administration to restore trust through transparency.
Member Highlights:
Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (R-Fla.), chairwoman of the Task Force, questioned Jefferson Morley about declassified information revealing that U.S. intelligence officials were monitoring Lee Harvey Oswald for four years and as recently as a week before President Kennedy’s assassination.
Rep. Nancy Mace (R-S.C.) detailed how the U.S. intelligence community has a pattern of not being truthful with the American people and how it impacts trust in our institutions. She praised President Trump for his administration’s commitment to transparency.
Rep. Mace: “The American people deserve transparency, not just on JFK files, MLK, Epstein list, all the things […] I am grateful to President Trump for keeping good on his promise to transparency […] Sunshine, literally, is the best medicine. They’ve just seen over the last few years, regardless of their politics, we saw 51 intelligence leaders sign a letter saying the Hunter Biden laptop was fake. Turns out that was a cover up. We saw presidential candidate Donald Trump spied on by the political opposition. We saw Biden’s health decline. The previous administration lied to the American people about the President’s health. They called him falling down, ‘cheap fakes.’ We saw the origins of COVID covered up by our government. […] And so we talk about this the deep state. Not only was it around during JFK assassination, but here today, it is right before our eyes, and they are doing this in real time.”
Rep. Eli Crane (R-Ariz.) questioned Mr. Morley about the most significant information released under President Trump’s executive order to declassify JFK files.
Rep. Crane: “What is the most interesting information you found in this newest release of documents on the assassination of President Kennedy?”
Mr. Morley: “The nine memos about James Angleton that were fully declassified on March 18 are the most important collection that I’ve seen so far. There is a lot of information that has come out. Jim mentioned that the Arthur Schlesinger memo that really sets the stage for the alienation between the Kennedy White House and the CIA that lasted for the rest of Kennedy’s presidency. So I would say that the Angleton memos and the Schlesinger memo are the most important things I’ve seen so far.”
Rep. Brandon Gill (R-Texas) noted how the lack of transparency has resulted in distrust in American institutions and questioned whether we can get the full facts about President Kennedy’s assassination.
Rep. Gill: “According to Pew Research, trust in federal government has plummeted from 74% in 1958 to 22% in 2025. That’s a trajectory that is utterly unsustainable, and in the long term, incompatible with Democratic self-governance. Unfortunately, a lot of that decline in trust is justified. The JFK assassination happened over 60 years ago and we still don’t have all of the facts about what happened that day.”
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Mr. Morley: “We have a new attitude on the part of the government. We have President Trump’s executive order, which strengthens the existing mandates of the JFK Records Act. So I think if the Task Force and the public and the Congress applied pressure and demand this material, we can get it and we can reach a decisive clarification about the causes of President Kennedy’s assassination.”
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