Pam Bondi refused to rule out prosecuting Jack Smith, Merrick Garland or Liz Cheney — three people Donald Trump said he might seek revenge against — when pressed during her confirmation hearing
When pushed on the possible prosecution of Jack Smith, Liz Cheney and Attorney General Merrick Garland, attorney general nominee Pam Bondi refused to answer, calling the questioning from Senator Mazie Hirono,
US Attorney General Merrick Garland defended the Justice Department on Thursday against what he called unfounded attacks and said prosecutions under his leadership were driven by "justice, not politics.
After more than a decade of defending Trump, Pam Bondi is now the president-elect's nominee to be the country's top prosecutor and reform the Department of Justice.
If the Justice Department under Merrick Garland and Joe Biden is genuinely so awful, why do Republicans keep resorting to a baseless lie about it?
From the hearing's outset, Democratic senators' questions reflected valid and critical concerns but often in a poorly framed manner.
Donald Trump's attorney general nominee, Pam Bondi, faced intense scrutiny from Senate Democrats during her confirmation hearing.
The letter signed by 10 senators who sit on the upper chamber's Judiciary Committee comes a week ahead of Trump taking office.
Pam Bondi faces tough questions about her loyalty to President-elect Trump during the Senate Judiciary Committee hearing
Pam Bondi, Donald Trump’s nominee for the next U.S. attorney general, refused to give a basic yes or no answer, during her confirmation hearing Wednesday, regarding her views on birthright citizenship, which is etched into the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution.
Bondi, Donald Trump's pick for attorney general, sought to reassure Democratic senators Wednesday that her Justice Department would not prosecute anyone for political purposes but also refused to rule out the potential for investigations into adversaries of the Republican president-elect.