Pam Bondi finally broke her silence after being fired by Donald Trump in a late-night White House showdown.
Bondi said she would be working to transition the attorney general office over the next month to help her deputy Todd Blanche before moving to an unspecified job in the private sector.
‘Leading President Trump’s historic and highly successful efforts to make America safer and more secure has been the honor of a lifetime, and easily the most consequential first year of the Department of Justice in American history,’ Bondi wrote on X.
‘Since February 2025, we have secured the lowest murder rate in 125 years, secured first-ever terrorism convictions against members of Antifa, shattered domestic and transnational gangs across the country, taken custody of more than 90 key cartel figures, and won 24 favorable rulings at the Supreme Court.’
Bondi said she will ‘remain eternally grateful’ to Trump despite being the second Cabinet official fired by the President in the last month.
Before becoming the attorney general, Bondi worked as a lobbyist for Ballard Partners for six years, where she was a partner in the company DC office.
Her tenure at the Justice Department was marred by months of MAGA fury over her botched handling of the Jeffrey Epstein files.
Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche will serve as acting attorney general until a permanent nominee is picked. Bondi is out of the administration and is expected to transition into the private sector.



Trump informed the AG last night shortly before his Iran speech that she would soon be leaving the Justice Department, according to a senior administration source.
Bondi, 60, pleaded with the President to keep her job, begging him to give her more time, a senior administration source told the Daily Mail.
‘She was unhappy and tried to change his mind,’ the source said.


