Bondi says she won't play politics as attorney general but doesn't rule
out probes of Trump foes
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[January 16, 2025]
By ERIC TUCKER, ALANNA DURKIN RICHER and MARY CLARE
JALONICK
WASHINGTON (AP) — Pam Bondi, Donald Trump's pick for attorney general,
sought to reassure Democratic senators Wednesday that her Justice
Department would not prosecute anyone for political purposes but also
refused to rule out the potential for investigations into adversaries of
the Republican president-elect.
Her often-testy confirmation hearing centered on concerns that Trump
would seek to use the Justice Department's law enforcement powers to
exact retribution against opponents, including investigators who
investigated him. Democrats pressed her on whether she could maintain
the department's independence from the White House and say no to the
president if asked to do something unethical, while Republicans welcomed
her as a course correction for a Justice Department they believe has
pursued a liberal agenda and unfairly pursued Trump through
investigations resulting in two indictments.
“What would you do if your career DOJ prosecutors came to you with a
case to prosecute, grounded in the facts and law, but the White House
directs you to drop the case?” asked Sen. Chris Coons, a Delaware
Democrat.
“Senator,” Bondi replied, “if I thought that would happen, I would not
be sitting here today. That will not happen.”
The line of questioning laid bare what Democrats see as the stakes of
Bondi’s appointment, particularly given the pressure Trump wielded on
his Justice Department during his first term to advance his personal
interests, including by demanding that the-then FBI director abandon an
investigation into an ally and by firing his first attorney general
following his recusal from an investigation into Trump's 2016 campaign.
Heading into another term, he's also called for investigations into
perceived foes, including prosecutors and lawmakers who investigated him
over offenses including trying to undo the 2020 election.
“I need to know that you would tell the president ‘no’ if you’re asked
to do something that’s wrong, illegal or unconstitutional,” said Sen.
Dick Durbin, the committee's top Democrat, who noted that Bondi had
represented Trump during the first of two Senate impeachment trials.
Bondi, the former attorney general of Florida and the first woman to
hold that job, repeatedly stressed that she would not play politics with
the Justice Department or pursue anyone for political reasons. She said
she would uphold the Constitution and said the public, not the
president, would be her client.
“Of course not,” she said when asked by Republican Sen. John Kennedy of
Louisiana if she would “start with a name to prosecute and then look for
a crime.” “I hope no attorney general going forward would ever do that,"
she added.
But those reassurances did not allay Democratic concerns about her
loyalty to Trump. Her testimony at times echoed Trump's campaign trail
rhetoric as she refused to denounce some of his more incendiary claims
and repeatedly invoked the size of Trump's election win in November —
“Look at the map of California, Sen. Schiff. It's bright red” — as proof
of a mandate for sweeping change.
Given a chance by Sen. Mazie Hirono, a Hawaii Democrat, to reject
Trump's characterization of supporters arrested in the Jan. 6, 2021,
insurrection at the Capitol as “hostages” or “patriots.” Bondi simply
said: “I am not familiar with that statement.”
She also refused to say she would encourage Trump not to issue blanket
pardons of all 1,500 people who have been charged in the attack that
left more than 100 police officers injured. But Bondi did denounce
violence against police officers, adding: “I’m not going to speak for
the president, but the president does not like people that abuse police
officers, either.”
Bondi also wouldn’t directly answer when asked whether Trump lost in
2020 to Democrat Joe Biden, only going so far initially to say that
Biden is the president.
She later said she accepted the election results but also suggested
there was fraud, alluding to her time as an advocate for the campaign in
Pennsylvania after that election, where she said she saw “many things”
while on the ground.
“We shouldn’t want there to be any issues with election integrity in our
country.” There is no evidence of widespread fraud that impacted the
election's outcome.
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Pam Bondi, President-elect Donald Trump's choice to lead the Justice
Department as attorney general, appears before the Senate Judiciary
Committee for her confirmation hearing, at the Capitol in
Washington, Wednesday, Jan. 15, 2025. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis)
She backed up Trump’s claims that the prosecutions against him
amounted to political persecution, saying the Justice Department
“had been weaponized for years and years and years, and it’s got to
stop.”
“They targeted Donald Trump,” Bondi said. “They went after him —
actually starting back in 2016, they targeted his campaign. They
have launched countless investigations against him.” She added: “If
I am attorney general, I will not politicize that office.”
In a heated exchange with Sen. Adam Schiff, a California Democrat
and frequent target of Trump's ire, she stated that “every case will
be done on a case-by-case basis” and said “no one should be
prosecuted for political purposes." But she equivocated when Schiff
asked Bondi whether she would investigate Jack Smith, the Justice
Department special counsel who brought two indictments against
Trump.
“I haven’t seen the file ... I haven’t looked at anything. It would
be irresponsible of me to make a commitment regarding anything ...
without looking at the file," she said.
Then, as the two spoke over each other, Bondi said that what she'd
been “hearing on the news is horrible.”
The suggestion that the investigations into Trump were politically
motivated has been sharply contested by Attorney General Merrick
Garland and Smith. In a report released this week, Smith said
politics played no part in his decisions and the evidence his team
gathered was sufficient for Trump to have been convicted at trial on
charges of scheming to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential
election.
Smith dismissed that case and a separate one charging Trump with
illegally hoarding classified documents at his Mar-a-Lago estate in
Palm Beach, Florida, after Trump’s election win in November, citing
longstanding Justice Department policy prohibiting criminal cases
against a sitting president.
The Justice Department under Garland also investigated Biden over
his mishandling of classified information — no charges were filed —
and named a special counsel to investigate Biden’s son Hunter, who
was convicted of tax and gun crimes before being pardoned by his
father.
Republicans expressed overwhelming support for Bondi and her planned
agenda, which she said includes protecting gun rights, free speech
and the border and fighting violent crime and terrorism.
By day’s end, her confirmation seemed assured in the
Republican-majority Senate. Republicans suggested that pointed
Democratic questions during the hearing about Kash Patel, Trump’s
pick for FBI director, was a more pressing concern for Democrats
than Bondi.
“If confirmed, I will work to restore confidence and integrity to
the Department of Justice — and each of its components,” Bondi said.
“Under my watch, the partisanship, the weaponization, will be gone.
America will have one tier of justice for all.”
Even as Democrats expressed concern that Trump would politicize the
Justice Department, Republican senators insisted that that's what
had happened over the last four years and that Bondi's selection
represented an opportunity to change direction.
Sen. Chuck Grassley, the Republican committee chair, listed years of
grievances against the Justice Department, including the
Trump-Russia investigation and more recently a Garland-era memo
aimed at targeting threats from parents at school board meetings.
“Ms. Bondi, should you be confirmed,” Grassley said, “the actions
you take to change the department’s course must be for
accountability, so that the conduct I just described never happens
again.”
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