As 2026 got underway, The Wall Street Journal reported that Donald Trump “repeatedly” complained to White House aides about Attorney General Pam Bondi, privately deriding the nation’s chief law enforcement officer as “weak and an ineffective enforcer of his agenda.”
The message wasn’t subtle: If Bondi intended to keep her job atop the Justice Department, she had to do more to impress the president.
Soon after, the beleaguered attorney general appeared before the House Judiciary Committee and put on a truly ridiculous display, in what was widely seen as one of the ugliest congressional hearings in modern American history. Trump, however, approved of her cringeworthy antics, which appeared to buy her a little time at Main Justice.
The reprieve was short-lived. MS NOW reported:
President Donald Trump on Thursday announced he has fired Attorney General Pam Bondi, removing her as the nation’s top prosecutor. … Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche will serve as acting attorney general, the president wrote.
Trump had informed Bondi in recent days that she would soon be removed from her position, a White House official and another person familiar with the situation told MS NOW. The official said Trump still personally likes Bondi and notified her before the official removal to ‘help her along.’
The president confirmed the news by way of his social media platform, writing that the Florida Republican “will be transitioning to a much needed and important new job in the private sector, to be announced at a date in the near future.”
Bondi’s ouster comes less than a month after Trump also fired Kristi Noem as Department of Homeland Security secretary.
There’s little doubt that the attorney general deserved to be ousted. Bondi was cartoonishly bad at her job and oversaw an unraveling DOJ that’s now a shell of its former self. The competition for “worst ever attorney general” is admittedly fierce — it’s tough to top John Mitchell, who went to prison after Watergate — but Bondi has earned a place in that conversation.
She failed in practically every way that an attorney general can fail.
But the problem isn’t that Trump’s decided to fire her, it’s his reason for firing her.
If the president had fired his handpicked attorney general (his second choice, after the post-election Matt Gaetz fiasco) because she was an incompetent, hyperpoliticized Cabinet official who prioritized the White House’s partisan agenda above the rule of law, that would’ve made sense. But that’s not what happened.
As MS NOW’s Ken Dilanian reported, “Pam Bondi was fired largely because Donald Trump grew dissatisfied with her inability to deliver on prosecuting his perceived enemies.”
This is the entire story in one sentence: The president ousted Bondi, not because she corrupted the Justice Department, but because she didn’t corrupt it enough.
Indeed, someone probably ought to tell the president that her successor will struggle just as much as she did to meet his expectations, because Trump wants what an attorney general can’t deliver: evidence-free indictments against his perceived political enemies.
As Bondi exits the DOJ as a disgraced and humiliated attorney general, she’s also the latest to learn a valuable lesson about Trump’s perception of loyalty. Bondi has always been there for Trump — dropping a case against his fraudulent “university,” clumsily defending him during one of his impeachment trials, leading a Trump super PAC, even turning Main Justice into an extension of his political operation — but it ultimately wasn’t enough.
Bondi, like Mike Pence, Kevin McCarthy, Reince Priebus, Mo Brooks, Ronna McDaniel, Elise Stefanik and Kristi Noem before her, learned an unsubtle lesson: Loyalty is something Trump expects to receive, not to bestow.
The post By ousting Pam Bondi, Trump made the right call for the wrong reasons appeared first on MS NOW.
From MS Now.

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