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Evening Standard
Evening Standard
World
Matt Watts

Pam Bondi sacked by Trump as Attorney General

Attorney General Pam Bondi speaks during a news conference - (AP)

Donald Trump has sacked Attorney General Pam Bondi from his cabinet.

​A White House official said she had been removed following mounting frustration with her performance, including her handling of the Epstein files.

Trump had also reportedly grown frustrated that Bondi was not moving quickly enough to prosecute critics and adversaries who he wanted to face ⁠criminal charges.

During her tenure as the top U.S. law enforcement official, Bondi was a combative champion of Trump’s agenda and dismantled the Justice Department’s longstanding tradition of independence from the White House in its investigations.

But it was repeated criticism over the Epstein files, including from Trump allies and some Republican lawmakers, that came to dominate her tenure.

Bondi was accused of covering up ⁠or mismanaging the release of records on the DOJ’s sex trafficking investigations ​into ⁠Epstein, a financier who cultivated ties with an array of wealthy and powerful figures.

The issue created political headaches for Trump and drew renewed scrutiny of his past friendship with Epstein, which he ⁠has said ended decades ago.

Her ousting could lead to a shake-up in strategy at the Justice Department and ​potentially a ⁠renewed push to deploy the U.S. legal system ‌against Trump’s targets.

Bondi is the second senior Trump official to be ousted recently. Trump removed Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem on March 5 following criticism of her management of the agency and Trump’s immigration agenda.

Bondi, a former ‌Republican state attorney general in Florida, said she worked on restoring the ‌Justice Department’s focus on violent crime and rebuilding trust with Trump’s supporters after federal prosecutors twice criminally charged Trump during his years out of power.

Bondi also faced criticism over the removal of dozens of career prosecutors who worked on investigations disfavored by Trump, with critics accusing her of ⁠abandoning the DOJ’s traditional focus on even-handed justice.

Bondi defended the rollout of the Epstein files, saying the Trump administration had been more transparent on the issue than previous presidents and that DOJ lawyers worked on a compressed timeline to review reams of material.

During a combative hearing before a House of Representatives panel in January, Bondi responded to criticism with political attacks directed at lawmakers. She refused to apologize or look at Epstein victims and their relatives who attended the proceedings.

Bondi early last year played into fevered speculation about the Epstein files, saying a client list was ‌on her desk for review. But after an initial release included material that had largely already been ​public, the DOJ and FBI declared in July that the case was closed and that no ‌further disclosures were warranted.

The move prompted an eruption of ⁠criticism and eventually a bipartisan law passed in November requiring the Justice Department to release nearly all ⁠of its files.

The release of roughly 3 million pages of records still did not quell the controversy, as lawmakers criticized redactions in the files ‌and the disclosure of the ​identities of some Epstein victims. The Republican-led House Oversight Committee voted ‌to subpoena Bondi and she was set to testify ​on April 14.

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