In a remarkable Friday night news dump, the Trump administration made dozens of White House staffers' financial disclosure forms available. But they did it with an extra dose of opacity.
These are important disclosures from the people who have the president's ear and shape national policy. They lay out all sorts of details, including information on ownership of stocks, real estate and companies, and make possible conflicts of interest public.
But the White House required a separate request for each staffer's disclosure. And they didn't give the names of the staffers, leaving us to guess who had filed disclosures, a kind of