BREAKING: Todd Blanche just accidentally said the quiet part out loud. During his high-stakes confirmation hearing to become the permanent U.S. Attorney General, Blanche was pressed on his relationship with Donald Trump. His response sent a shockwave through the Senate Judiciary Committee: “I’m his lawyer,” Blanche said, before awkwardly correcting himself. “Was his lawyer.”
On the surface, this is just a viral Freudian slip—a momentary lapse by a man who spent intense years defending Donald Trump in multiple high-profile criminal cases. But the underlying power dynamic suggests something far more dangerous. The blunder perfectly encapsulates the exact fear driving the opposition to his confirmation.
For decades, the Department of Justice has operated under a post-Watergate norm: a strict, independent firewall between the White House and the nation’s top law enforcement agency. Blanche’s slip validates the narrative that this firewall has officially collapsed. By instinctually referring to himself as the President’s lawyer while sitting in the acting Attorney General’s chair, Blanche exposed a DOJ that is functioning less like an independent constitutional body and more like a taxpayer-funded extension of Donald Trump’s personal legal defense team.
The power move underneath this confirmation battle is absolute loyalty. Blanche assumed the acting role after his predecessor, Pam Bondi, was ousted over frustrations regarding the pace of prosecutions against the administration’s political opponents. Critics point to this timeline—and his oversight of controversies like the scrapped $1.8 billion “anti-weaponization” settlement fund—as proof that his true mandate is personal retribution, not justice.
There is another way to read this: it was simply an exhausted misstatement under extreme pressure. During the same hearing, Blanche explicitly promised that he is not a “yes-man” and vowed he would resign rather than execute an unlawful or unethical order from the White House.
However, in Washington, the first answer is often the honest one. The slip of the tongue hands Democratic lawmakers and skeptical Republicans the ultimate political ammunition. The question is no longer just whether Todd Blanche can objectively enforce the law. It is whether the United States still has an independent Attorney General, or just a President with a very powerful personal attorney.