Pam Bondi faces Senate fire over DOJ conduct
Summary
- Pam
Bondi faced tough questioning by the Senate Tuesday. - Senators
accused her of politicizing the Justice Department. - Concerns
raised about targeting Trump’s perceived enemies.
Since becoming the country’s top law enforcement officer,
Bondi has courted a great deal of controversy, with some claiming that she has
not upheld the boundaries that keep the agency apart from the White House.
“President (Joe) Biden never directed the attorney general
to prosecute his political opponents… What has taken place since January 20,
2025 would make even President Nixon recoil,”
Dick Durbin, the top Democrat on
the Senate Judiciary Committee, told her in a blistering opening speech.
He claimed that when the president and his political cronies
do wrongdoing, the Justice Department under Bondi has “become a shield for
them.”
Throughout the 2024 election campaign, Trump made frequent
threats to target his political opponents. In a recent social media post, he
seemed to chastise Bondi, calling someone he called “Pam,” for his
inaction.
Soon later, former FBI director James Comey, who oversaw an
investigation into Russian meddling in the 2016 presidential election, was
indicted by federal prosecutors, sending shockwaves through Washington.
Comey, who is accused
of lying to Congress in a case that many legal experts believe is fictitious,
is scheduled to appear in court on Wednesday.
The controversy has been exacerbated by the opening of
investigations into US Senator Adam Schiff, former National Security Advisor
John Bolton, and New York Attorney General Letitia James, all of whom have
openly opposed Trump.
In what appeared to be an insult to Bondi, Trump named all
three in his post.
Delaware Democrat Senator Chris Coons expressed his
“deep concern” that Trump’s statement “seems to have led to
dramatic and sudden action by the department” by “urging you to go
after and to indict and to prosecute specific, named people.”
“We are returning to our core mission of fighting real
crime. While there is more work to do, I believe in eight short months, we have
made tremendous progress towards those ends,”
she said.
Trump was facing numerous indictments for allegedly hoarding
classified government documents and spearheading a criminal conspiracy to
overturn the 2020 election result before his election erased his own legal
troubles.
Republicans claim that Bondi’s team has less issues
regarding weaponization than the Justice Department under Biden, which oversaw
two of the indictments.
Senate Judiciary Chairman Chuck Grassley released FBI
documents the night before the hearing, revealing that Special Counsel Jack Smith
surreptitiously collected phone information on eight Republican senators’
interactions while looking into Trump.
“That’s what we’ve been talking about when we refer to the
weaponization of government… we are ending this weaponization,”
Bondi said when
Grassley brought up the issue.
Bondi also faced heat on her handling of the files relating
to the federal investigation into notorious sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
House Democrats supported by a handful of Republicans have
been pressing for the release of the entire case file, after Bondi announced
that the case was closed and that she had no new information to offer.
Which senators led the most aggressive questioning of Bondi?
The leading Democrat on the committee harshly attacked Bondi
for firing experienced prosecutors and changing the Department of Justice into
a weapon for President Trump. Durbin said Bondi’s conduct had created a
“historic stain” on the Department of Justice.
The senator, who is known for her rapid-fire questioning,
pressed Bondi on a range of issues, including investigations and senior
Department of Justice departures.
She pressed Bondi with persistent questions and references
to alleged misdeeds related to a $50,000 cash bribe involving border official
Tom Homan, urging Bondi for clear answers while highlighting evasiveness.