Five questions hanging over the DOJ shake-up
Morning Report
Five questions hanging over the DOJ shake-up
Comments:
by Jared Gans - 04/03/26 6:45 AM ET
Comments:
Link copied
by Jared Gans - 04/03/26 6:45 AM ET
Comments:
Link copied
NOW PLAYING
Morning Report is The Hill’s a.m. newsletter. Subscribe here.
In today’s issue:
▪ Bondi ousted as attorney general
▪ DHS funding plan goes to House
▪ White House ballroom approved
▪ Resentencing for Tina Peters
President Trump is hoping for a fresh start with the Department of Justice (DOJ) after firing Attorney General Pam Bondi following rising frustration with her leadership.
Trump praised Bondi in a Truth Social post announcing her ouster but decided to move on after she faced significant scrutiny for her handling of the Epstein files and several high-profile embarrassments in failing to mount cases against multiple perceived enemies of the president.
Bondi said she will leave her position after a leadership transition this month, but much uncertainty remains over what the future holds for the department following her exit.
Here are five questions hanging over the shake-up:
Who is going to take over?
Trump said in his post announcing Bondi’s departure that Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche would be taking over as acting DOJ head. But it’s unclear how long Blanche will be in the role and, if he is replaced, who Trump might nominate to permanently serve as attorney general.
Blanche defended Trump in three criminal cases as his personal attorney before being tapped for the No. 2 spot at DOJ. While he’s been a loyal ally of the president’s, The New York Times notes “he has on occasion shown himself to be loyal to his roots as a former federal prosecutor trained in the Southern District of New York and has held off some of the president’s most impulsive efforts to open criminal cases unsupported by the evidence.”
Trump on Thursday called him a “very talented and respected Legal Mind.”
“Thank you to President Trump for the trust and the opportunity to serve as Acting Attorney General. We will continue backing the blue, enforcing the law, and doing everything in our power to keep America safe,” Blanche said in a post on the social platform X.
Other figures have reportedly been floated as potential picks to permanently succeed Bondi, including Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lee Zeldin.
Trump will likely want in his next AG a steady hand who he also sees as a top ally on high-profile investigations.
What happens to probes against Trump’s rivals?
One hallmark of Bondi’s tenure as attorney general was her oversight of multiple prosecutions against top adversaries of the president, most of which have failed.
Former FBI Director James Comey and New York Attorney General Letitia James (D) were the first high-profile individuals indicted by Trump’s DOJ last fall, but those cases were tossed out. Grand juries have rejected attempts to bring charges against people such as James and six Democratic members of Congress.
Other individuals who have been targeted by the DOJ have yet to be charged. And most recently, a subpoena issued to Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell was quashed.
Despite the DOJ’s efforts, most of the cases haven’t yielded the results Trump has hoped for. Questions remain as to whether these efforts will pick up or dial down with a new leader.
But in one possible indication of what’s to come, The Daily Mail and Semafor reported Trump was frustrated with Bondi because he believed she alerted Rep. Eric Swalwell (D-Calif.) about the administration’s plan to release files from a decade-old investigation into his ties to an alleged Chinese spy.
Swalwell, who is running for governor of California, hasn’t been accused of any wrongdoing in that case. But he and others have remained targets of the Trump administration.
How much does the Epstein controversy hound the next attorney general?
The controversy surrounding the Epstein files dominated Bondi’s time as attorney general almost from the start, spurring attention on an issue that Trump has been clearly eager to move on from.
Just weeks into the job, Bondi made waves when she said an alleged “client list” of disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein was sitting on her desk, ready for review and release. But after a DOJ memo released in July stated that no such client list existed, Bondi faced backlash from across the political spectrum.
The memo fueled momentum for Congress to pass legislation requiring the disclosure of the government’s files on Epstein, much to the chagrin of Trump. Once the documents started being released, Bondi and the DOJ also faced pushback for widespread redactions in the materials.
Bondi is currently scheduled to testify before the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee on April 14 in its investigation into the