Donald Trump has found a backup to be the country's top law enforcement officer, nominating Pam Bondi to be the U.S. attorney general. He tapped Bondi for the job after his initial pick, former Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.), bowed out of contention amid sexual misconduct and sex trafficking allegations.
Previous career Bondi, 59, was born in Florida. She earned her undergraduate degree from the University of Florida before completing her JD at Stetson University. As Florida's AG, Bondi "stressed human trafficking issues and urged tightening state laws against traffickers," said Al Jazeera.
After leaving office as Florida's AG, Bondi started maintaining close ties with then-President Trump while taking up a role at the lobbying firm Ballard Partners. She was most notably a "senior adviser on Trump's first impeachment defense team," a role for which she took a leave from Ballard Partners, said The Hill. Bondi went back to the lobbying firm following the impeachment and is still a "partner at Ballard Partners, which is also where Trump's incoming chief of staff Susie Wiles worked," said The Hill.
Bondi-Trump relationship Bondi's longstanding relationship with Trump, which goes back to before he entered politics, has some questioning her potential role as attorney general. Most notable is the "controversial $25,000 contribution that Trump's foundation gave to Bondi's political action committee during her 2014 reelection bid," said CNN.
If confirmed, Bondi "appears likely to oblige" Trump on his request for federal investigations into people he believes are political opponents, said The Associated Press. Unlike Gaetz, Bondi "doesn't radiate scandal," said Politico. But when Trump has "faced threats to his political career and livelihood, Bondi has been there."
Bondi has also mentioned the supposed weaponization of the Department of Justice. However, while Gaetz has spoken of his "distrust of federal spying programs, called for breaking up and relocating the FBI and demanded an end to Jan. 6 prosecutions," Bondi has "remained publicly silent on these specific issues," so it's unclear to what extent she would follow Gaetz on that path. |