Trump fires Pam Bondi after tumultuous 14-month term as attorney general

Trump fires Pam Bondi after tumultuous 14-month term as attorney general


President Trump fired Pam Bondi as attorney general on Thursday, ending a tumultuous 14-month tenure marked by mass firings of career prosecutors, a bungled handling of Jeffrey Epsteinโ€™s sex trafficking investigation and a string of investigations into the presidentโ€™s political foes, including prominent California Democrats.

Trump announced the ouster of the former Florida attorney general in a Truth Social post, praising her as a โ€œGreat American Patriot.โ€ It caps months of controversy surrounding Bondiโ€™s leadership, which critics called an unprecedented assault on the independence of the nationโ€™s top law enforcement agency.

Deputy Atty. Gen. Todd Blanche, Trumpโ€™s former personal criminal defense attorney, will serve as acting attorney general until a permanent replacement is named. Blanche, like Bondi, has been a loyal backer of Trump while at the Justice Department.

Blanche has denounced past criminal cases against Trump as baseless and politically motivated, even while championing new criminal cases against Trumpโ€™s own political opponents. He has also echoed Trumpโ€™s sharp criticisms of the federal judiciary, declaring the Justice Department is at โ€œwarโ€ with a cadre of โ€œrogue activist judges.โ€

Bondi, in a post on X, promised to assist with the transition while defending her tenure โ€” in part by citing historic declines in homicides.

โ€œLeading President Trumpโ€™s historic and highly successful efforts to make America safer and more secure has been the honor of a lifetime, and easily the most consequential first year of the Department of Justice in American history,โ€ she said.

Bondiโ€™s dismissal drew sharp reactions from California Democrats, including Reps. Robert Garcia (D-Long Beach) and Ro Khanna (D-Fremont), two lawmakers who put immense legislative pressure on Bondi to release the Epstein files and accused her of overseeing a โ€œcover-up.โ€

In separate statements, Garcia and Khanna said that Bondi remains legally obligated to appear before the House Oversight Committee and testify under oath about what they called a โ€œbotchedโ€ handling of the Epstein investigation.

โ€œEven though she was fired, she must still answer to Congress about the remaining documents, why we have no new prosecutions, and why she participated in a cover-up,โ€ Khanna said.

News outlets pointed to multiple reasons for Trumpโ€™s decision to fire Bondi.

Some reported that it had to do with Trumpโ€™s ire over Bondiโ€™s handling of the Epstein files. After Congress passed a law forcing their release, Bondi presided over that release โ€” amid criticisms she was slow-walking it, withholding certain records and overly redacting others.

Garcia, the ranking Democrat on the committee, wrote on X that Bondi and Trump โ€œmay think her firing gets her out of testifying to the Oversight Committee,โ€ which she is meant to do April 14, but they โ€œare wrong โ€” and we look forward to hearing from her under oath.โ€

Rep. Nancy Mace (R-S.C.), another member of the committee who backed the subpoena for Bondi to testify, also said it โ€œstill stands.โ€

โ€œWhen the Oversight Committee moved to subpoena Bondi, I did it by name, not by or not as the sitting Attorney General of the U.S.,โ€ she wrote on X.

Nonetheless, Bondiโ€™s testimony appeared in doubt.

โ€œSince Pam Bondi is no longer attorney general, Chairman Comer will speak with Republican members and the Department of Justice about the status of the deposition subpoena and confer on next steps,โ€ a committee spokeswoman said Thursday, referring to Rep. James Comer (R-Ky.).

The announcement led some to question whether Bondiโ€™s ouster was in part an effort by the White House to keep her from testifying.

Others reported Trump was peeved at her for tipping off Rep. Eric Swalwell (D-Dublin) that the Justice Department was considering releasing documents from a years-old investigation into his relationship with a suspected Chinese intelligence operative named Christine Fang, or Fang Fang.

Swalwell, a leading California gubernatorial candidate, was not the target of that investigation and cut ties with Fang in 2015 after U.S. intelligence officials briefed him and other members of Congress about Chinese efforts to infiltrate Congress. A release of records from that investigation now would be unusual.

Swalwell has denied any wrongdoing in the Fang case and accused the FBI of planning to release details from it now as an attack by Trump and FBI Director Kash Patel, a Trump loyalist who reports to the attorney general, on their political opponents and โ€œan abuse of power that we havenโ€™t seen since the dirty days of J. Edgar Hoover.โ€

On Thursday, Swalwell also denied receiving any notification from Bondi, saying he โ€œhad no heads-up by anyone in the administration. None.โ€

โ€œThese stories would be laughable if not so outrageous,โ€ he said, adding that Trump officials were facing low approval ratings and โ€œlooking to blame anyone but the right people โ€” themselves.โ€

Still other outlets reported that a key factor in Trumpโ€™s decision to fire Bondi was her failure to secure criminal indictments and convictions against various Trump political enemies who he has accused with little evidence of wrongdoing and has publicly pushed Bondi and other Justice Department officials to prosecute.

One of those targets is Sen. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.), whom Trump accused of committing mortgage fraud by characterizing multiple homes as his primary residence in years-old mortgage documents.

Schiff has denied any wrongdoing and accused Trump of targeting him for political reasons. Justice Department officials have also declined to bring any criminal charges against Schiff to date.

Itโ€™s unclear whether that would change under new leadership. Blanche has reportedly been involved in overseeing the Schiff investigation and butted heads with former Justice official Ed Martin, who had zealously investigated Schiff before being removed.

In an X post on Thursday, Schiff cheered Bondiโ€™s ouster but said that she was โ€œmerely a symptom of Donald Trumpโ€™s chronic allergy to our nationโ€™s laws,โ€ that her being tossed aside โ€œdoes not mitigate the need for her to answer for her conductโ€ as attorney general, and that Blanche โ€œshould expect to receive the same scrutiny.โ€

โ€œPam Bondi oversaw an unprecedented weaponization of the Justice Department that brought our nationโ€™s rule of law to its knees,โ€ Schiff wrote. โ€œCountless and baseless political investigations, hundreds of career law enforcement professionals purged, a massive cover-up of the Epstein files, and a wholesale effort to turn the department into a criminal law firm representing the person of the president instead of the American people.โ€

Sen. Alex Padilla, a Los Angeles Democrat, said โ€œgood riddanceโ€ to Bondi in a post on X.

โ€œBondi dodged transparency on the Epstein files, tried to go after voter rolls to undermine elections, and weaponized the Justice Department against Trumpโ€™s enemies,โ€ Padilla said. โ€œAmericans deserve accountability, not cover-ups and corruption.โ€

It was unclear Thursday how long Trump may leave Blanche in the top post. As deputy attorney general, he had a hand in many of the decisions as to the day-to-day operations of the department under Bondi โ€” including on the handling of the Epstein files.

Blanche personally interviewed Epsteinโ€™s imprisoned former girlfriend, Ghislaine Maxwell, in a federal prison in Florida, where she was serving a 20-year term for helping Epstein sexually abuse young girls. During that interview, Maxwell said she never witnessed Trump in any โ€œinappropriate setting.โ€

Blancheโ€™s decision to personally interview Maxwell was highly unusual, given how high ranking he was in the Justice Department.

Within days of the interview, which was perceived in part as a ploy for clemency by Maxwell, she was moved to a minimum-security camp in Texas.

The Epstein files have dogged the Justice Department since Trump returned to office in January 2025, becoming one of the most politically combative issues of his second term, and will ultimately be part of Bondiโ€™s legacy.

From the start of Trumpโ€™s second term, conservatives pressured the administration to release the investigative files, hoping for revelations about powerful figures connected to the late financier. Bondi initially stoked those demands and once suggested in an interview that the Epstein โ€œclient listโ€ was on her desk, a claim she later walked back.

The damage to her credibility proved lasting, and she faces scrutiny both in public and in Congress. In a February hearing, for instance, Bondi traded insults with congressional Democrats while dodged questions. At one point, she responded to a question in defense of the administration by boasting about the stock market.

โ€œThe Dow is over 50,000 points right now,โ€ she said, a moment that drew intense attention online.

Bondi remained loyal to the president on Thursday, writing in her X post that she would โ€œremain eternally gratefulโ€ to him for trusting her as his attorney general and work โ€œtirelessly to transitionโ€ Blanche into his new role.

Blanche praised Bondi in his own post on X, saying she had led the Justice Department โ€œwith strength and conviction.โ€ He also thanked Trump for โ€œthe trust and the opportunityโ€ for him to serve in the acting role.

โ€œWe will continue backing the blue, enforcing the law, and doing everything in our power to keep America safe,โ€ Blanche wrote.

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