💥 The Accountability Collision: Senator Klobuchar Demolishes AG Bondi Over DOJ Independence and Gun Control Hypocrisy
Attorney General Refuses to Answer Core Questions on Trump Directives and the Second Amendment, Hiding Behind ‘Pending Litigation’ and Attacking Congress for Shutdown
WASHINGTON, D.C. — Attorney General Pam Bondi faced a blistering and prolonged confrontation during a recent Senate hearing, where Democratic Senator Amy Klobuchar systematically dismantled Bondi’s claims of Justice Department independence and exposed the hypocrisy of her stance on gun control. Bondi, refusing to answer core questions about receiving directives from the White House and the firing of career prosecutors, repeatedly hid behind procedural excuses, culminating in a defiant pivot to blame Congress for the federal government shutdown.
The exchange provided a stark illustration of the deep mistrust between the DOJ leadership and Congress regarding the agency’s commitment to the rule of law over political loyalty.
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The Second Amendment Dodge: From Defender to Deflector
Senator Klobuchar began the questioning by referencing Bondi’s successful defense of the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School Public Safety Act in Florida after the tragic Parkland shooting. As Florida’s Attorney General in 2018, Bondi defended the law, which banned bump stocks, enacted red flag laws, and raised the minimum age to purchase a firearm from 18 to 21.
Klobuchar attempted to find “common ground” by asking if Bondi agreed that federally raising the age for purchasing assault weapons to 21 could reduce mass shootings, noting that the Parkland, Buffalo, and Uvalde shooters were all young adults.
Bondi’s response was immediate and obstructive:
“Senator, first that that’s pending litigation and I can’t discuss that at all. The the 21 is pending litigation. I cannot discuss that.”
Klobuchar pressed the issue, reminding Bondi that she was asking about her views on a bill she previously defended in court, not the current litigation itself. Bondi’s refusal to answer on a policy she had championed years before reinforced the perception that her current position is dictated by political alignment, not legal consistency.

Instead, Bondi defaulted to the administration’s core talking point: that her DOJ is the “most pro-second amendment DOJ in American history” and only aims to keep guns “out of the hands of criminals and gangs,” entirely avoiding the age limit question that directly related to mass shooters who purchased their weapons legally.
The Independence Test: The White House Directive
The most explosive segment of the exchange focused on the independence of the Justice Department, particularly regarding the President’s public demands for prosecution. Klobuchar reminded Bondi of her commitment during her nomination hearing that “politics will not play a part in my decisions” and that the DOJ “must be independent.”
Klobuchar then presented concrete evidence of political interference:
The President’s Public Demand: Klobuchar cited a Truth Social post from September 20th, 2025, in which the President named Bondi directly, stating, “We can’t delay any longer, Pam… not bringing criminal charges, are killing our reputation and credibility,” and explicitly ordered her to prosecute a member of the Senate committee, the Attorney General of New York, and former Director James Comey.
The Direct Question: “Do you consider that a directive to the Justice Department?”
Bondi’s refusal to address the statement directly was brazen: “Senator Klobuchar, President Trump is the most transparent president in American history and I don’t think he said anything that he hasn’t said for years.”
This deflection—labeling the President’s explicit, public directive as mere “transparency”—was seen as an unacceptable refusal to uphold the independence of her office.
The Purge and the Personnel Cover-Up
Klobuchar then detailed a clear pattern of politically motivated firings, focusing on the Comey prosecution:
Klobuchar pointed out reports that Bondi initially pushed back against requests to fire the acting US Attorney in Virginia, Eric Seabbert (a conservative Republican who decided there was insufficient evidence to prosecute Comey), and asked Bondi why she later changed her opinion.
Bondi’s response: “I am not going to discuss personnel decisions.”
Klobuchar noted that career prosecutors found “insufficient evidence to bring criminal charges against former Director Comey”—a fact Bondi would not confirm, again citing “pending cases.”
Klobuchar then highlighted the firing of Michael Beneri, a 20-year national security prosecutor in the Eastern District of Virginia, following criticism from a right-wing social media commentator who assumed Beneri was part of the “internal resistance” to the Comey indictment. Beneri, in fact, was working on cases for service members killed in Afghanistan.
When asked how firing a 20-year national security prosecutor “enhance public safety,” Bondi pivoted completely:
“Senator Clovershar, I’m not going to discuss personnel decisions, but the personnel issue that I’m having right now is that all of my agents, all of my lawyers are working. My agents are on the street working without a paycheck because your party voted to shut down the federal government.”
This aggressive deflection—blaming Congress for the shutdown to avoid answering questions about the politicization of the DOJ—marked the final act of the “smackdown,” confirming the deep schism between Bondi’s political loyalty and the oversight required by Congress.