Saturday, April 18, 2026
Meet the New Boss; Worse than the Old Boss
Meet the New Boss; Worse than the Old Boss
Blanche
takes the DOJ to even lower depths.
Apr 16, 2026
When Pam Bondi was sacked earlier this month, amid reports that her firing offense was, of all things, insufficient zeal in securing convictions of Trump’s enemies, the logical question was: just what more could she have done? Bondi had seemingly pulled out every possible stop to deliver the scalps to the King, foiled only by the checks that exist outside DOJ’s walls, especially grand juries that refused to indict the innocent targets she had placed before them.
At the time, the question seemed rhetorical. It wasn’t. In
Todd Blanche’s three weeks as Acting AG, he has taken screws that seemed fully
turned and tightened them another notch. His initial moves suggest that, hard
as it is to conceive, he will be even more vicious, more slavish toward Trump,
and more willing to jettison the public interest and the rule of law than was
his consummately servile predecessor.
Meet the new boss. Worse than the old boss.
In 14 months, the shortest confirmed tenure of any Attorney
General in 60 years, Bondi managed to eviscerate the mission and good faith of
the DOJ to the point where courts that had always assumed the best of
government lawyers had begun to assume the worst. It was the
antithesis of justice without fear or favor, the Justice Department’s historic
watchword: instead, Bondi’s DOJ delivered favor to Trump’s allies and tortured
his enemies.
Yet in barely three weeks on the fifth floor, Blanche has
done Bondi one better, which is to say the country one worse. The Department,
in April, has moved to whitewash the criminal records of the worst January 6
offenders; fired career prosecutors for working righteous cases now in
political disfavor; deployed loyalist assistants to intimidate the Federal
Reserve in a manner both nakedly political and downright bizarre; and routed a
reprisal perjury prosecution to a division with no conceivable jurisdiction
over it.
Start with the most historically consequential. On Tuesday,
the Department filed a bare-bones motion in the D.C. Circuit seeking to vacate
the seditious conspiracy convictions of the worst January 6 offenders: eight
Oath Keepers, including founder Stewart Rhodes, and four Proud Boys, including
Joseph Biggs and Ethan Nordean.
These men were the architects of the worst assault on
democratic self-governance in our lifetimes. Their prosecutions, for seditious
conspiracy, arguably the most serious and demanding charge in the federal
arsenal, were the hardest and proudest achievement of the largest criminal
investigation in DOJ history.
The seditious conspirators had already received an
outrageous windfall when Trump commuted their sentences on his first day back
in office. Since then, he has embraced them as “hostages,” “unbelievable
patriots,” and “warriors,” and called January 6 itself “a day of love.” The
motion to vacate takes this grotesque revisionism to its logical conclusion.
The four-page motion offered no legal argument, no claim of
innocence, no suggestion of prosecutorial error. It simply declared that
dismissal “is in the interests of justice.”
Whose justice might that be?
On remand, the government will move to dismiss with
prejudice, meaning no retrial is ever possible. The legal system will formally
reflect that Stewart Rhodes and company committed no January 6-related crimes.
At that point, these newly exonerated defendants will be positioned to sue the
United States for malicious prosecution, just as Michael Flynn did, walking away with
1.25 million taxpayer dollars. A collection of pardoned January 6 defendants
has already brought a class action against the Capitol police officers they
overran that day, alleging excessive force. Rhodes and company can now wave their
own dismissals with prejudice.
This is not, as Bondi and Trump might suppose, the triumph
of one political faction over another. The whitewashing of the worst January 6
crimes is an offense against the entire country, Republicans and Democrats,
MAGA and never-Trump alike. The convictions Blanche erases belonged to all of
us.
The second item involves firing people for doing their
jobs, and smearing them on the way out.
This week, the Department fired at least four career
prosecutors who had worked FACE Act cases under Merrick Garland, simultaneously
releasing a 900-page “weaponization” report accusing those same prosecutors of
selective enforcement. They got the knife and the smear at the same time.
The Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances (FACE) Act was passed in 1994 with bipartisan support, its primary target the physical blockading of abortion clinics, with protections for houses of worship added to bring Republicans along.
The felony cases Garland’s prosecutors brought involved
defendants who physically blockaded clinic entrances. Not people standing
peacefully with signs. The cases were not close calls. In Washington, D.C.,
defendants forced their way into a clinic and blockaded the doors while a
co-conspirator livestreamed it. In Mount Juliet, Tennessee, a coordinated group
physically blocked a patient from receiving care while two ringleaders ran a
deliberate deception operation to delay police. That is the conduct Blanche has
now declared a firing offense to prosecute.
What makes this doubly perverse is the asymmetry Blanche
has enshrined as policy: FACE Act cases involving houses of worship get the
Justice Department’s full attention, as with the tenuous prosecution of Don
Lemon for covering a protest in a St. Paul church; cases involving abortion
clinics are now restricted to “extraordinary circumstances.” Same conduct, same
statute, different outcomes depending on the political valence of the victim.
Then there is Tuesday’s drop-in visit to the Federal
Reserve by two prosecutors in Jeanne Pirro’s office and an investigator.
Chief Judge James Boasberg had already quashed Pirro’s
subpoenas targeting the Fed in March, finding that the government had produced
“essentially zero evidence to suspect Chair Powell of a crime” and that the
investigation was transparently designed to pressure Powell on interest rates.
So Pirro dispatched two prosecutors, Steven Vandervelden and Carlton Davis, to
show up unannounced at the Fed’s Washington headquarters and request a tour of
the renovation project Trump has cast as the source of Powell’s supposed
criminal exposure.
It is hard to overstate how anomalous this is. Prosecutors
don’t make unannounced visits to subjects of an investigation and ask for a
tour. Beyond that, the Fed is represented by counsel, Robert Hur, the former
United States Attorney who investigated Biden’s handling of classified
documents and found no basis for charges. Contacting a represented party
without counsel present is a blatant ethical violation. Hur responded with a
tart letter advising Pirro’s office that if it wished to challenge Boasberg’s ruling,
the courts provided an avenue. That avenue is called an appeal. Pirro has yet
to file one.
A word about Vandervelden and Davis. They are also the same Pirro soldiers who previously tried to indict six sitting Democratic members of Congress for taping a video urging military personnel they need not comply with illegal orders. Vandervelden has no prior federal prosecutorial experience; Davis previously served as a congressional staffer and has a single brief stint as an AUSA to his name.
The result: not a single vote to indict. It’s the first
total shutout in federal grand jury practice that I’ve ever even heard about.
The old saw is that a grand jury will indict a ham sandwich. It wouldn’t bite
on the very different malodorous sandwich Vandervelden and Davis were serving.
The only plausible explanation for the Fed field trip is
raw intimidation, a rattling of sabers, saying we still have you in our sights.
Trump confirmed as much the next morning, telling Fox Business the probe would
continue and that it was “more than a criminal probe.” The President of the
United States, on camera, volunteered that his prosecutors are doing something
other than pursuing criminal justice.
Finally, there is Cassidy Hutchinson, the then-25-year-old former White House aide whose June 2022 testimony remains one of the most consequential public accounts of Trump’s conduct on January 6. She was a loyal Republican staffer with no political animus toward Trump. She simply told the truth under oath, at considerable personal cost, against documented pressure from her Trump-supplied attorney not to, an attorney she eventually discharged.
The prospective perjury charge centers on her relaying what
she had been told by White House Deputy Chief of Staff Tony Ornato about Trump
lunging for the steering wheel of the presidential vehicle. The Secret Service
agent in the car disputed the account; Ornato himself later claimed not to
remember telling her. Relaying in good faith what a senior White House official
told you is not perjury, by any stretch. The willful and material falsehood the
charge requires is nowhere in evidence.
Bondi opened the inquiry in her final weeks as a last-ditch
bid to please Trump. Blanche greenlighted the next step: assigning the matter
to Harmeet Dhillon’s Civil Rights Division. Dhillon is a longtime Trump
personal attorney, an ardent promoter of his 2020 election fraud claims, and an
official who has described her mission as not merely slowing civil rights
enforcement but “turning the train around and driving in the opposite
direction.”
But perjury prosecutions are not her job. Every division in
the Department has its own bailiwick. I don’t know of a single instance in
which the Civil Rights Division has handled a congressional perjury case. There
is no institutional authority to do so. The assignment is designed for one
purpose: to show Trump that the Hutchinson prosecution is in the hands of a
trusted enforcer.
What distinguishes Blanche, and has earned him particular
contempt among former DOJ colleagues, is that he knows better. Bondi was over
her head from day one, a Fox News personality dropped into the nation’s premier
law enforcement institution. Blanche is a former Assistant United States
Attorney who spent years in the Southern District of New York. He knows that
the career prosecutors he has fired acted with integrity and dedication to
justice. He knows the value of the traditions he is feeding through a meat
grinder, because he was formed by them.
Blanche served in a Justice Department where it was
forbidden for the White House even to communicate with DOJ about a pending
case, and he knows precisely why that rule existed and what its abandonment
means. Now he takes pride in turning that rule upside down.
At his first press conference as Acting AG, asked about
Trump’s explicit public demands that DOJ investigate his political opponents,
Blanche said: “It is true that some of them involve men, women, and entities
that the president in the past has had issues with and believes should be
investigated. That is his right, and indeed it is his duty to do that, meaning
to lead this country.”
Whoa. The Acting Attorney General of the United States
describes it as the president’s duty, and a function of his
leadership, to order prosecutions of his political enemies. It is a
breathtaking characterization of Trump’s corrupt agenda, now become the
Department of Justice’s mission statement.
In three weeks, Blanche has made clear there is no floor he
recognizes. He is all in, past Bondi, past any limiting principle. We thought
we had seen the bottom. We hadn’t.
And that gives rise to one question, also unfortunately not
rhetorical: how much lower can he drive the Department of Justice?
Talk to you later.
Krugman.
![]()
Transcript When you’re losing a war, but it’s not an existential defeat, your country, your government can continue pretty much as before. Aside from the humiliation, there’s a well-established technique, which is to declare victory and pull out. But it appears that Trump can’t even pull that off. Hi, Paul Krugman with a Saturday update on the situation in the Strait of Hormuz and all of that. It’s been clear for a while that the United States has basically lost this war. The goal was to achieve regime change, possibly to take Iran’s uranium. Neither of those is going to happen. The Iranian regime is harder line than it was before. Iran has ended up strengthened because it’s demonstrated its ability to shut off traffic through the Strait of Hormuz. No way the United States, even under current management, is going to commit ground troops to attempt to really do in Iran’s nuclear program on a sustained basis. So the indicated strategy was to essentially give up, but claim that something wonderful was accomplished, and that’s certainly something that Trump is good at doing. But he hasn’t been able to pull that off, I think because he himself is incapable of facing reality. So the Iranians said that they are willing to allow free passage of shipping through the strait, by which it turns out they mean basically passage that stays close to the Iranian coast and pays a toll along the way. Well, what’s our alternative to that? What is it that we want to get? The United States has started imposing a blockade on Iran, which hurts the Iranians. It does give them a reason to seek a deal, but only if they get something out of it. So if allowing ships to start carrying oil and LNG and fertilizer and helium out of the Gulf allows them to sell their own oil again and to import food, which apparently is an important issue for Iran, then that’s a deal that can be done. It will, in practice, be a strategic defeat for the United States, but something that the Trump administration could try to spin as a victory. But in order to get that, you have to actually deliver on that deal. You can claim that you’re winning and that they’re surrendering, not us, but you have to actually deliver on the deal. What Trump tried to do was to say, great, they’re opening up the strait, but meanwhile, we’re going to continue our blockade. And also, they have promised that we can have the uranium, which they had not. That doesn’t work. It’s just basic logic. Why would the Iranians agree to a deal if they don’t get a lifting of the US embargo, don’t get their ability to sell oil and their ability to import food back? If that’s what’s going to happen, then you might as well keep the strait blocked. So what was this supposed to be? What was the idea? What was the thinking? Well, as best I can tell, and this is all speculation now, I don’t think that Trump has taken on board, maybe he’s emotionally incapable of taking on board the reality that he screwed up, that he took us to war and lost, that he, in his mind, still thinks that America has the upper hand and that the Iranians are cowering in fear over the might of the U.S. military, and that he doesn’t need to make any concessions, Does he really believe that? Do we even know? Is really believing a thing that makes sense in his case? Probably not. But to some extent, he is at least incapable of accepting as a basic proposition, never mind in public, but at least in terms of actual policymaking, accepting as a proposition that, well, the U.S. just found the limits to its power, and they turn out to be closer to our goal than they are to the Iranians’ goal. So we basically have to cut our losses by making a deal that leaves the Iranians with some stuff that they didn’t have before. He can’t seem to do that. But if he doesn’t do that, then the Strait of Hormuz will remain closed. In fact, it’s more closed than before because the Iranians are not managing to export oil, which is new. They were exporting oil before, and now that little bit of supply to the world market has been cut off. It’s about 2% of world oil supply. Not huge, but in a very tight oil market, it is significant. And I have no idea where it goes from here. Once again, we’re in a situation of total uncertainty. Now, I might be willing to say, maybe I’m misunderstanding, maybe the United States does have, in some sense, more leverage. But, you know, we do have markets. The futures markets are closed for the weekend. So let’s see what happens when they reopen Sunday night. But the prediction markets are open, and for all the problems with the prediction markets, they show very clearly that the perceived probability that the strait would reopen by June 1stspiked last week and is now back basically to where it started. All of a sudden, we’re down to a 30% or so probability of getting the strait open anytime soon, which looks about right. Maybe that’s even a bit high. But, my God, like I said, we are led by people who not only can’t plan a war right, they can’t even successfully execute a surrender. And that’s a really bad omen, not just for the Iran conflict, but for everything else. |
LINKS TO RELATED SITES
- My Personal Website
- HAT Speaker Website
- My INC. Blog Posts
- My THREADS profile
- My Wikipedia Page
- My LinkedIn Page
- My Facebook Page
- My X/Twitter Page
- My Instagram Page
- My ABOUT.ME page
- G2T3V, LLC Site
- G2T3V page on LinkedIn
- G2T3V, LLC Facebook Page
- My Channel on YOUTUBE
- My Videos on VIMEO
- My Boards on Pinterest
- My Site on Mastodon
- My Site on Substack
- My Site on Post
LINKS TO RELATED BUSINESSES
- 1871 - Where Digital Startups Get Their Start
- AskWhai
- Baloonr
- BCV Social
- ConceptDrop (Now Nexus AI)
- Cubii
- Dumbstruck
- Gather Voices
- Genivity
- Georama (now QualSights)
- GetSet
- HighTower Advisors
- Holberg Financial
- Indiegogo
- Keeeb
- Kitchfix
- KnowledgeHound
- Landscape Hub
- Lisa App
- Magic Cube
- MagicTags/THYNG
- Mile Auto
- Packback Books
- Peanut Butter
- Philo Broadcasting
- Popular Pays
- Selfie
- SnapSheet
- SomruS
- SPOTHERO
- SquareOffs
- Tempesta Media
- THYNG
- Tock
- Upshow
- Vehcon
- Xaptum
Total Pageviews
GOOGLE ANALYTICS
Blog Archive
-
▼
2026
(609)
-
▼
April
(61)
- The Slow Surrender to Unreality
- Meet the New Boss; Worse than the Old Boss
- Krugman.
- The FBI Director Is MIA
- MAUREEN DOWD
- HEATHER
- What I Saw Inside the Kennedy Center
- Trump Thinks Catholics and Evangelicals Are the Sa...
- WAR CRIMES WON'T HIDE SEX CRIMES
- HOWARD TULLMAN JOINS LISA DENT ON WGN RADIO TO ANN...
- NEW INC. MAGAZINE COLUMN FROM HOWARD TULLMAN
- TRUMP IS THE PROBLEM
- HEATHER
- Protecting ourselves from Trump’s descent into mad...
- ROBERT REICH
- Trump’s Erratic Behavior and Extreme Comments Revi...
- HEATHER
- Why Celebrate JD Vance's Worst Week Ever?
- “The world turned upside down.”
- MELANIA
- TOO STUPID
- Donald Trump Is Losing What Little Mind He Has Left
- Why Aren’t Republicans Fleeing Trump?
- HUBBELL
- HEATHER
- PAUL KRUGMAN
- Thea Tullman Moore
- Anthropic’s Restraint Is a Terrifying Warning Sign
- Trump v. United States Didn't Make the President A...
- MAGAts Suckered Again
- The Worst Ever
- Enough With the Nepo Candidates, Democrats
- How Much Humiliation Can Vance Take?
- HEATHER
- KRUGMAN
- No One Is Intimidated by Trump Anymore
- Break Now, Fix Later
- NEW INC. MAGAZINE COLUMN FROM HOWARD TULLMAN
- Frank Bruni
- Heather
- Paul Krugman
- Inside the battle at the Justice Department to get...
- Who's Next??
- A Madman at the Helm
- This Was the Moment Donald Trump Lost His Mojo
- Everyone but Trump Understands What He’s Done
- TRUMP'S LEGAL AND ETHICAL RECORD
- How to AI
- America's next class war: AI fluency
- OLIVIA OF TROYE
- LET'S NOT FORGET WHAT A PERVERT AND CRIMINAL TRUMP...
- KISS PAMMY GOODBYE - TRUMP STYLE
- Heather 4-2
- HARRY LITMAN
- RUTH MARCUS
- A sick little tyrant
- DEAR PAM
- THERE IS NO BOTTOM - TRUMP IS AN PATHETIC PIG AND ...
- LADY LINDSEY STRIKES AGAIN
- HARRY KRAEMER
- HOWARD TULLMAN JOINS LISA DENT ON WGN RADIO TO DIS...
-
▼
April
(61)








