Most of these won’t be the final words on the matters involved. Trump’s legal team can and will appeal the first one. The second was just about a temporary injunction and is also subject to further legal action. The New York bill is subject to legal challenge. And the IRS draft memo was never the official position of the agency.

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But all of these things taken together underscore that Trump’s absolutist strategy toward blocking Congress from gathering information is extremely bold and subject to plenty of defeats. When you declare “We’re not turning anything over” and leave it to those around you to figure out how to construct their own portions of the stonewall, you’re bound to lose plenty. When you argue Congress has no right to investigate you for corruption — even though Congress has long investigated presidents for corruption (think: Watergate and Whitewater) and even though the Justice Department has recognized Congress’s “investigatory powers” — you’re attempting to create a really ambitious new precedent.

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Then again, Trump’s strategy here was never really about winning all of these battles. As The Post’s Philip Bump has written, it’s more about delaying things and drawing out the clock ahead of the 2020 election. And if he wins a few, all the better.

As with most things Trump, the only thing preventing him from pursuing this aggressive deny-and-delay strategy is shame or political blowback. And Trump has shown a remarkable capacity to avoid both of those things. If you’re not going to pay a price with your core supporters, after all, why not throw a whole bunch of stuff at the wall and hope it sticks?