Pam Bondi’s Comeback- In 2017, Pam Bondi was passed over as too scandal-tainted. This time, she’s the safe, acceptable fallback choice

Knuckle Ball

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Pam Bondi’s Comeback
In 2017, Pam Bondi was passed over as too scandal-tainted. This time, she’s the safe, acceptable fallback choice.
By David A. GrahamNovember 22, 2024, 11:49 AM ET
Photo of Pam Bondi smiling at a microphone, with a large American flag behind her

Chip Somodevilla / Getty
Produced by ElevenLabs and News Over Audio (Noa) using AI narration. Listen to more stories on the Noa app.
Out goes a Florida man, in comes a Florida woman. Hours after Matt Gaetz, Donald Trump’s pick for attorney general, withdrew from consideration, the president-elect last night announced that he will nominate Pam Bondi to lead the Justice Department.

Bondi, a former attorney general of Florida, is widely viewed as a more serious and confirmable pick, and although that is partly a statement of what a ridiculous choice Gaetz was, it also shows how far expectations—and standards—have been lowered since the start of the first Trump administration. In 2017, Bondi was passed over for an administration role for fear that she was too scandal-tainted. This time around, she’s the safe, acceptable fallback choice.

If Bondi’s name means anything to you, you’re probably either a Floridian or a real Trump-news obsessive. After a stint as a local prosecutor, Bondi was elected as Florida attorney general in 2010 and served two terms. She left that office in 2019 and worked on Trump’s defense teams for both of his impeachment trials. Bondi also worked as a lobbyist in that period, with clients including the Qatari government, Amazon, and Uber. (You really don’t hear much about “draining the swamp” these days.) She also joined the America First Policy Institute, a Trump-aligned nonprofit.

David A. Graham: Trump’s first defeat

Bondi’s highest-profile connection to Trump began in 2013, during her first term as Florida attorney general. Several state attorneys general had probed Trump University, a souped-up real-estate seminar suspected of advertising itself with fraudulent claims. In September 2013, Bondi announced that she was considering joining a lawsuit in New York. Within days, Trump’s personal putative charity, the Trump Foundation, had written a $25,000 check to And Justice for All, a group supporting her reelection—a donation that Bondi had personally solicited several weeks earlier. Bondi then declined to join the suit. (Bondi denies that the payment affected her decision.)

In the kaleidoscopic way of Trumplandia, the foundation itself was a kind of scam; it was later forced to shut down, and Trump admitted to 19 violations, including self-dealing. The Trump Foundation was not legally permitted to make political donations, and instead of reporting the pro-Bondi donation as such, it reported it as a gift to Justice for All, a similarly named nonprofit in Kansas. After The Washington Post uncovered the details, a Trump aide insisted that the mistake was innocent, but the IRS fined Trump $2,500.

When Trump won the presidency in 2016, Bondi was widely expected to land a job in his administration. In January 2017, Bloomberg even reported that an appointment was imminent, but nothing ever materialized—apparently because Trump staffers were concerned that questions about the donation would make confirmation hearings difficult and damaging. How quaint—now she’s the person Trump is relying on to sail through confirmation. And given the scale of Gaetz’s problems, the weaknesses of other Cabinet nominees, and the fatigue among the press and populace, that seems likely to work.

She is similar in this way to John Ratcliffe, whom Trump last week nominated to lead the CIA. During Trump’s first term, in 2019, he nominated Ratcliffe to be director of national intelligence, a job that helps coordinate all U.S. intelligence agencies. Ratcliffe was forced to withdraw once it was clear that the Senate wouldn’t confirm him, because he had no real qualifications for the job, and had exaggerated what little he did have. (I wrote at the time that Ratcliffe “would have been the least qualified DNI in the position’s short history,” but the current nominee for that post, Tulsi Gabbard, gives him a run for his money.) A year later, Trump nominated him again, and this time the Senate sighed heavily and confirmed him, despite concerns that he would improperly politicize the job. This is precisely what he did: In the last weeks of the 2020 campaign, Ratcliffe disclosed unverified information about the 2016 election, which career officials worried was disinformation, in a blatant attempt to boost Trump’s reelection.

Read: The art of the swindle

And yet when Trump announced Ratcliffe’s nomination this time around, it was met with something between a shrug and relief. After all, compared with Gaetz and Gabbard, here was a guy with actual experience in his appointed subject and in the executive branch! Trump has managed to move the goalposts so far, they’re in the budget parking lot.

Pete Hegseth, his nominee to lead the Defense Department, fits the same pattern. He was considered to lead the Department of Veterans Affairs in the first Trump administration, but not chosen. Now he’s been picked to lead an even more important and sprawling bureaucracy, though the only new qualifications he’s picked up in the ensuing years are three vitriolic books, many hours on Fox, and dismissal from guarding Joe Biden’s inauguration. (Hegseth’s nomination seems rickety after revelations of a sexual-assault accusation, but he may yet make it through.)

If confirmed, Bondi will likely be a more effective and reasonable attorney general than Gaetz. She is not driven by personal grievance in the way he seems to be, and she has experience as both a prosecutor and a state attorney general. Like Gaetz, however, she is unlikely to defend the independence of the Justice Department from presidential interference. In addition to her past loyalty, she backed Trump’s bogus claims of election fraud in 2020. Trump has also already named three of his personal criminal-defense attorneys to top DOJ positions. At this stage, perhaps less bad news is the best anyone can desire, but none of this is good.




Bondi and the rest of these picks are all people Trump believes will be loyal and do as they are told when the time comes.
 

Addict2sex

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Jan 29, 2017
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Anyone that comes afterr Gaetz looks that way
Trump outsmart exposed the Rino’s and the commiedemocrat. He out played and out smart them all.
The first 100 days of office is critical, he have to move fast ! He need to destroy the democratic DOJ hidden state and clean up the DOJ.
Looking from the point of Trump view … the Trump Art of the deal . Trump really wanted Bondi ( Trump personal loyal defence lawyers on his first impeachment) . Gaetz was the distraction… Gaetz voluntarily took the fall.
Gatez don’t have to deal with the house anymore. Gatez get the senate seat, his old House seat is solid republican so they dont lose the seat, and Gatez is a living Fu to the RINOs and DemoCommie in the next Congress. Trump played them like a violin! Trump playing 3D chess while Congress playing checker. Look how he outplayed them and look how fast he selected Ms. Bondi.Ms Bondi is really good and smart. He need her to dismantle the DOJ. He now get to give the democratic and deep state their own medicine, guaranteed someone( lots deep state players) will be going to jail! Trump need to clean up deep state ( FBI, CIA, DOJ).

LoL. !!
 
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mandrill

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She's not in any way "acceptable".

The GOP will endorse her in the senate and that means no one can do fuck about the appointment.

This is all a set up for Trump cancelling the 2028 election - or claiming that it's fraudulent if he loses - and Hitlering America for the next 15 years, if he lives that long.
 
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Vinson

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Nov 24, 2023
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Pam Bondi’s Comeback
In 2017, Pam Bondi was passed over as too scandal-tainted. This time, she’s the safe, acceptable fallback choice.
By David A. GrahamNovember 22, 2024, 11:49 AM ET
Photo of Pam Bondi smiling at a microphone, with a large American flag behind her

Chip Somodevilla / Getty
Produced by ElevenLabs and News Over Audio (Noa) using AI narration. Listen to more stories on the Noa app.
Out goes a Florida man, in comes a Florida woman. Hours after Matt Gaetz, Donald Trump’s pick for attorney general, withdrew from consideration, the president-elect last night announced that he will nominate Pam Bondi to lead the Justice Department.

Bondi, a former attorney general of Florida, is widely viewed as a more serious and confirmable pick, and although that is partly a statement of what a ridiculous choice Gaetz was, it also shows how far expectations—and standards—have been lowered since the start of the first Trump administration. In 2017, Bondi was passed over for an administration role for fear that she was too scandal-tainted. This time around, she’s the safe, acceptable fallback choice.

If Bondi’s name means anything to you, you’re probably either a Floridian or a real Trump-news obsessive. After a stint as a local prosecutor, Bondi was elected as Florida attorney general in 2010 and served two terms. She left that office in 2019 and worked on Trump’s defense teams for both of his impeachment trials. Bondi also worked as a lobbyist in that period, with clients including the Qatari government, Amazon, and Uber. (You really don’t hear much about “draining the swamp” these days.) She also joined the America First Policy Institute, a Trump-aligned nonprofit.

David A. Graham: Trump’s first defeat

Bondi’s highest-profile connection to Trump began in 2013, during her first term as Florida attorney general. Several state attorneys general had probed Trump University, a souped-up real-estate seminar suspected of advertising itself with fraudulent claims. In September 2013, Bondi announced that she was considering joining a lawsuit in New York. Within days, Trump’s personal putative charity, the Trump Foundation, had written a $25,000 check to And Justice for All, a group supporting her reelection—a donation that Bondi had personally solicited several weeks earlier. Bondi then declined to join the suit. (Bondi denies that the payment affected her decision.)

In the kaleidoscopic way of Trumplandia, the foundation itself was a kind of scam; it was later forced to shut down, and Trump admitted to 19 violations, including self-dealing. The Trump Foundation was not legally permitted to make political donations, and instead of reporting the pro-Bondi donation as such, it reported it as a gift to Justice for All, a similarly named nonprofit in Kansas. After The Washington Post uncovered the details, a Trump aide insisted that the mistake was innocent, but the IRS fined Trump $2,500.

When Trump won the presidency in 2016, Bondi was widely expected to land a job in his administration. In January 2017, Bloomberg even reported that an appointment was imminent, but nothing ever materialized—apparently because Trump staffers were concerned that questions about the donation would make confirmation hearings difficult and damaging. How quaint—now she’s the person Trump is relying on to sail through confirmation. And given the scale of Gaetz’s problems, the weaknesses of other Cabinet nominees, and the fatigue among the press and populace, that seems likely to work.

She is similar in this way to John Ratcliffe, whom Trump last week nominated to lead the CIA. During Trump’s first term, in 2019, he nominated Ratcliffe to be director of national intelligence, a job that helps coordinate all U.S. intelligence agencies. Ratcliffe was forced to withdraw once it was clear that the Senate wouldn’t confirm him, because he had no real qualifications for the job, and had exaggerated what little he did have. (I wrote at the time that Ratcliffe “would have been the least qualified DNI in the position’s short history,” but the current nominee for that post, Tulsi Gabbard, gives him a run for his money.) A year later, Trump nominated him again, and this time the Senate sighed heavily and confirmed him, despite concerns that he would improperly politicize the job. This is precisely what he did: In the last weeks of the 2020 campaign, Ratcliffe disclosed unverified information about the 2016 election, which career officials worried was disinformation, in a blatant attempt to boost Trump’s reelection.

Read: The art of the swindle

And yet when Trump announced Ratcliffe’s nomination this time around, it was met with something between a shrug and relief. After all, compared with Gaetz and Gabbard, here was a guy with actual experience in his appointed subject and in the executive branch! Trump has managed to move the goalposts so far, they’re in the budget parking lot.

Pete Hegseth, his nominee to lead the Defense Department, fits the same pattern. He was considered to lead the Department of Veterans Affairs in the first Trump administration, but not chosen. Now he’s been picked to lead an even more important and sprawling bureaucracy, though the only new qualifications he’s picked up in the ensuing years are three vitriolic books, many hours on Fox, and dismissal from guarding Joe Biden’s inauguration. (Hegseth’s nomination seems rickety after revelations of a sexual-assault accusation, but he may yet make it through.)

If confirmed, Bondi will likely be a more effective and reasonable attorney general than Gaetz. She is not driven by personal grievance in the way he seems to be, and she has experience as both a prosecutor and a state attorney general. Like Gaetz, however, she is unlikely to defend the independence of the Justice Department from presidential interference. In addition to her past loyalty, she backed Trump’s bogus claims of election fraud in 2020. Trump has also already named three of his personal criminal-defense attorneys to top DOJ positions. At this stage, perhaps less bad news is the best anyone can desire, but none of this is good.




Bondi and the rest of these picks are all people Trump believes will be loyal and do as they are told when the time comes.
Nobody is going to be good for you, unless He/she is a Trans. You guys can't get over it. 😂 What a doll !!!
 

Knuckle Ball

Well-known member
Oct 15, 2017
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Nobody is going to be good for you…
You are probably right. Anyone that Trump nominates will inevitably be an ass-kissing sycophant who will assist Trump in using the DOJ to imprison his enemies and assist him in consolidating power and staying in office past his term.

I don’t think it matters who occupies these cabinet posts; they have all been pre-screened for their loyalty to Trump. America knew this when they elected Trump; this is what America wants.
 

Vinson

Well-known member
Nov 24, 2023
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You are probably right. Anyone that Trump nominates will inevitably be an ass-kissing sycophant who will assist Trump in using the DOJ to imprison his enemies and assist him in consolidating power and staying in office past his term.

I don’t think it matters who occupies these cabinet posts; they have all been pre-screened for their loyalty to Trump. America knew this when they elected Trump; this is what America wants.
Get over it, you're going to have 4 hard years.
 

nottyboi

Well-known member
May 14, 2008
22,535
1,388
113
Trump outsmart exposed the Rino’s and the commiedemocrat. He out played and out smart them all.
The first 100 days of office is critical, he have to move fast ! He need to destroy the democratic DOJ hidden state and clean up the DOJ.
Looking from the point of Trump view … the Trump Art of the deal . Trump really wanted Bondi ( Trump personal loyal defence lawyers on his first impeachment) . Gaetz was the distraction… Gaetz voluntarily took the fall.
Gatez don’t have to deal with the house anymore. Gatez get the senate seat, his old House seat is solid republican so they dont lose the seat, and Gatez is a living Fu to the RINOs and DemoCommie in the next Congress. Trump played them like a violin! Trump playing 3D chess while Congress playing checker. Look how he outplayed them and look how fast he selected Ms. Bondi.Ms Bondi is really good and smart. He need her to dismantle the DOJ. He now get to give the democratic and deep state their own medicine, guaranteed someone( lots deep state players) will be going to jail! Trump need to clean up deep state ( FBI, CIA, DOJ).

LoL. !!
Trump has some decent advisors this time. And I think this is as good as we will get to President Musk. We shall see if having the influence of a really clever person makes things better or just leads to an alternate dystopia.
 

southpaw

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May 21, 2002
229
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This is all a set up for Trump cancelling the 2028 election - or claiming that it's fraudulent if he loses
For a guy who regularly hurls insults on terb, you really are a dumb ass. He can't run again.

The two term limit was put in place just for megalomaniacs like Trump.
 

southpaw

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May 21, 2002
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Vinson

Well-known member
Nov 24, 2023
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Thanks for your concern but I’m good. America has embraced fascism. Maybe Canada will be next. I don’t like it but I have white skin so I’ll probably be fine.
That's what happens when a country goes too much to the left and Trans become priorities over women, people can't afford food and rent because of flooding of migrants that also end up not respecting the country that takes them in. Several countries in Europe have already have turned to the right, the US did and hopefully Canad will too.
 

Vinson

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Nov 24, 2023
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Actually, Pam Bondi's not bad looking for a close to sixty-year-old babe.

Pam Bondi Joining White House Staff To ...


Looks very nice for 60. In the last few days she got support from a unexpected source Ana Navaro from the View. 😁



The cohosts of The View were celebrating Thanksgiving a little bit early on Friday’s (November 22) episode by expressing their gratitude over the latest development in the Donald Trump cabinet selection spree: Matt Gaetz, who was subject to a House ethics investigation over allegations of sexual misconduct with a minor, withdrew as the nominee for Attorney General.

“I’m taking wins where I can get them to be honest,” Alyssa Farah Griffin said. “I think Matt Gaetz would have been one of the most dangerous, reckless, and just a terrible choice and totally unqualified for attorney general. And I think it gives us a little glimmer of hope that Republicans are taking their advice and consent role seriously.”

Griffin went on to predict that with Gaetz’s nomination no longer at issue, the next one that could draw major scrutiny from Senate Republicans is Fox News’ Pete Hegseth for Secretary of Defense. “Initially, I was like, ‘I don’t think he’s that bad of an actor. He served our country.’ The more we’re learning about him, he has credible sexual misconduct allegations, but he also would be the single least qualified Secretary of Defense in history, overseeing three million people across the globe in 160 countries and would be one of two people on the planet who can deploy the U.S. military. So I think this is one that folks need to be like, ‘Is a Fox News host who’s never managed many people really somebody who should be Secretary of Defense, in the line of succession for the president?'”


Sara Haines echoed Griffin’s initial sentiment, saying, “I want to take my wins where we get them, so I’m happy that anything is better than Matt Gaetz — literally anything.” However, she wasn’t as reassured by what his withdrawal means for the system of checks and balances, instead saying, “It says more about how hated he was. I don’t think this was people finding a backbone and saying, ‘This is out of bounds.'”

Sunny Hostin, on the other hand, was relieved by the news. “It actually gave me some solace,” she explained. “I was very worried that Trump saying he wanted these recess appointments, and I think he really thought that he could put up someone like Matt Gaetz, someone that he hadn’t really vetted, someone that he just sort of nominated him as a whim, thinking that he had the Senate and they would not object.”

Ana Navarro, meanwhile, was a bit more direct with her praise for the Gaetz withdrawal, saying, “I want to acknowledge that they stood up to Donald Trump, that they are doing their jobs of providing checks and balances, of doing advice and consent, and that there is a bridge, a line that they will not cross. So I want to applaud them. I want to thank them, and I want to tell them, ‘Your job is not over.'”

Hostin then countered that Trump’s replacement selection, Pam Bondi, was “a very dangerous pick” since she openly “supported Trump’s false election claim” in 2020. However, Navarro had her own very personal reasons for approving of that nomination.

“I have known Pam Bondi for many, many, many years. I will tell you, I don’t want to ruin her reputation with MAGA people, but Pam Bondi and I hung out a lot when she was attorney general of Florida, and she would come to Miami, we drank a lot together. I liked her a lot. She’s not a kook,” Navarro said.


 
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