Pam Bondi just secured the job as the nation’s top law enforcement officer, locking in a 54-46 Senate confirmation on Tuesday.
And in a bit of a plot twist, the lone Democrat to back her? Senator John Fetterman (D-Pa.), the only Dem openly calling out the legal cases against Trump as politically motivated. He joined every single Republican in voting to confirm her.
Pam Bondi Joins the DOJ as Trump Looks to Clean House
Bondi steps in as Attorney General at a time when Trump is vowing to dismantle what he calls the Biden administration’s “weaponization” of the Justice Department. She’s now at the helm of a massive operation, overseeing the FBI, ATF, and other key law enforcement agencies.
At her confirmation hearings, Bondi was crystal clear: politics won’t drive her decisions. “Justice will be administered evenhandedly throughout this country,” she stated. “The partisanship, the weaponization—it’s gone. America will have one tier of justice for all.”
Her nomination sailed through the Senate Judiciary Committee on a strict party-line vote (12-10) before hitting the full Senate floor.
Bondi Looking to Those Who Targeted Trump
And here’s where things get even more interesting: Bondi now has the authority to review Trump-related federal investigations. Former special counsel Jack Smith, who led those cases, stepped down before Trump reentered the White House. Ultimately, both cases against Trump collapsed under a longstanding Justice Department precedent barring prosecution of a sitting president.
Bondi has hinted that those prosecutors who targeted Trump may have their own legal battles ahead. “The Department of Justice—the prosecutors will be prosecuted, the bad ones. The investigators will be investigated,” she told Fox News after Trump was charged in 2023. “The deep state was hiding in the shadows last term. But now, they’ve got a spotlight on them.”
Before stepping onto the national stage, Bondi served two terms as Florida’s Attorney General. Now, she’s taking on an even bigger role—and promising a major shake-up at the DOJ.
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