Mike Fox
The departure of US Attorney General Pam Bondi on April 2, 2026, marked the inevitable conclusion of a turbulent 14-month effort to reshape the Department of Justice into a direct instrument of the White House. Although she arrived with a clear mandate to dismantle the established bureaucracy and settle political scores, her eventual exit was defined not by a lack of ideological commitment but by a consistent failure to achieve “wins” for the president.
The Bondi era commenced with a sweeping removal of career federal prosecutors who handled cases related to the January 6 defendants. She began her tenure by creating the “Weaponization Working Group,” an internal unit specifically tasked with investigating the investigators. However, under her leadership, the practice of using the department against political adversaries moved into unprecedented territory. This aggressive posture was most evident in the pursuit of the president’s perceived rivals, including former FBI Director James Comey and New York Attorney General Letitia James. These high-profile probes ultimately faltered when they encountered the scrutiny of the federal judiciary, jurors, and grand jurors alike. In a sharp rebuke of Bondi’s approach, federal judges have repeatedly found that several of her acting US attorneys were serving illegally.
The human consequences of this institutional shift were reflected in case of Kilmar Abrego Garcia. After the Trump administration mistakenly deported him to El Salvador, rather than concede its error, the Justice Department has continued to engage in a protracted legal battle. This spectacle suggests a department more concerned with maintaining a specific public image than adhering to the rule of law. Similarly, the department’s refusal to investigate the Minneapolis shooting of Renee Good by Immigration and Customs Enforcement Agent Jonathan Ross signaled a retreat from the traditional mandate of the Civil Rights Division. Even smaller attempts at political theater proved unsuccessful, such as the failed prosecution of notorious sandwich thrower Sean Dunn.
By the spring of 2026, Bondi was caught between critics who condemned the politicization of the law and a president who appeared frustrated that her aggressive tactics had failed to convict a single presidential adversary. The final collapse of her support came unexpectedly from the administration’s own base, which grew critical over her handling of the Epstein files. When tensions finally reached a breaking point, the president showed Bondi the door. Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche and Bondi’s eventual successor will inherit a department fractured by institutional upheaval—one often at odds with a federal judiciary that historically has been highly deferential. As Bondi leaves, the department remains tasked with the difficult work of reconciling President Trump’s political demands with the enduring requirements of the Constitution.
The Senate must now approach its advice and consent role with the utmost seriousness. Just as it is the responsibility of federal prosecutors to independently scrutinize the evidence before bringing a case, it is the responsibility of senators to rigorously scrutinize the next nominee, ensuring they confirm someone who possesses no history of prosecutorial misconduct and who pledges to place their constitutional oath above personal allegiance. When a president requests that the law be violated, an ethical attorney general must maintain his or her integrity. And when the president calls upon them to violate their ethical obligations, they must refuse and, if necessary, resign—following the example of those who have already resigned in the Trump era to protect the Justice Department from political incursion.














