MS NOW95%
Trump is considering replacing Pam Bondi, according to source 0%
By Carol Leonnig0% Ken Dilanian0% Mychael Schnell86%
4/2/2026, 12:40:06 PM
BS Summary: This article contains 18 faulty reasoning types, including Fundamental Attribution Error, Halo Effect, and Availability Heuristic, with Negativity Bias as the most egregious example at 46.1% saturation with 191 hits. Analysis detected 776 faulty-reasoning hits from 414 analyzed words, generating a BS Score of 0% and a BS Rank of 0% (0 of 16,813 articles). This article is better (less manipulative) than 100.00% of the article peer group.
President Donald Trump is eyeing replacing Pam Bondi as attorney general, according to a person familiar with White House discussions.
Trump has been frustrated with Bondi’s inability to successfully prosecute several individuals who Trump argues should face criminal charges, and whom he considers political enemies.
The source requested anonymity because they are not authorized to speak on sensitive matters.
It’s unclear which people Trump is upset are not being prosecuted by Bondi’s Justice Department.
But grand juries have rejected some of the efforts to charge Trump critics like Letitia James and Democratic lawmakers, and judges have blocked other attempts by the administration at building legal cases as lacking evidence.
The attorney general has been under constant fire for her handling of the release of investigative files related to convicted and deceased sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein.
The House Oversight Committee recently subpoenaed her to testify about her department’s handling of the files’ release.
She refused to answer questions about that handling during a feisty House Judiciary Committee hearing in February.
In response to a request for comment, the Justice Department referred MS NOW to the White House.
A White House spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
But in a statement to The New York Times, which first reported the news on Wednesday, Trump said, “Attorney General Pam Bondi is a wonderful person and she is doing a good job.”
The Times reported that Trump is weighing replacing Bondi with the head of the Environmental Protection Agency, former New York congressman Lee Zeldin.
If Trump moves ahead with the decision to oust Bondi, she would be the second Cabinet member to leave during Trump’s current tenure in the White House.
Then-Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem was ousted in early March after an uproar over the department’s mass deportation policies and her own controversial testimony before Congress.
Bondi, a former state attorney general for Florida, has bent the Justice Department to the will of the White House unlike any attorney general in modern history.
She has fired civil servants at Trump’s directive, investigated Trump’s perceived enemies and has curbed enforcement disfavored by Trump allies.
But that hasn’t shielded Bondi from blowback over her handling of the Epstein matter.
After initially promising to release an Epstein “client list,” stoking long-simmering conspiracy theories about the case, she later released a statement that poured cold water on those theories, acknowledging no such client list existed.
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