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After four decades of unfairness inside the U. S. Department of Justice, there’s a new deputy in town.  ,
Attorney General Pam Bondi is wasting no time stumbling over the wires of a weaponized Justice Department with her confirmation last week on a largely party-line ballot ( Pennsylvania Sen. John Fetterman was the only Democrat to cast a ballot with Republicans ). In her first time in charge, Bondi signed 14 guidelines that would restore fairness and effectiveness to law enforcement.  ,
When Bondi took the oath of office as the world’s 87th attorney general, he vowed to rebuild integrity to the Justice Department, combat violent crime in this country, and around the world, and make America healthy again.
The former Florida AG nominee for DOJ leadership, who was nominated by President Donald Trump, said Bondi may “take murder out of the system.”
Social Goals
To that end, one of Bondi’s memos to Judge employees announces the development of a work force to look into the Biden administration’s use of the office to go after the public’s political enemies, Trump most prominently. The Biden presidency and “allies throughout the nation engaged in an extraordinary, third-world weaponization of prosecutor power to overturn the political process,” the president has stated in an effort to counteract the threat of its No. 1 ranking. 1 social army.  ,
The DOJ’s Weaponization Working Group did examine” the activities of all department and agency’s exercising civil or criminal enforcement authority in the United States over the past four years” for instances where it appears a department’s or agency’s conduct was intended to pursue political objectives or other poor aims more than justice or genuine administrative objectives.
The evaluation will include an assessment of Special Counsel Jack Smith’s$ 50 million-plus national situations targeting Trump and the lawyers and law enforcement agents involved in the “unprecedented” attack on the government’s Florida house. Additionally, it may look into It involvement in the false accusations made against Trump, his family, and other individuals by Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg, New York Attorney General Letitia James, and people. And the working class will look into “improper analytical methods and irresponsible indictments” related to the accused and convicted in the Jan. 6, 2021 protests at the Capitol.  ,
The attorney general’s letter says that” no one who has acted with a righteous soul and just purposes has any cause for concern” about efforts to combat fraud and weaponization. ” On the other hand, the Department of Justice does not tolerate crimes of the criminal justice approach, aggressive behavior, or other types of misconduct”.
Political Infection
The Senate and House judiciary committee chairmen stated on Monday that the DOJ’s efforts to end the use of force are a” common sense and much needed approach.”
” If you’ve followed our oversight, it shouldn’t come as news to you that political infection has saturated the DOJ and FBI in recent years”, Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, and Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, said in a joint statement. The judiciary committees have raised myriad concerns about Smith’s politically tinged investigations, “baseless attacks on Catholics practicing their faith”, repeated retaliation against whistleblowers, and other “politically-infected conduct by the DOJ”.
The chairmen vowed that the oversight work of their committees” will continue at full.”
New to the Senate Judiciary Committee this session is Sen. Eric Schmitt, former Missouri attorney general. The Republican was the lead plaintiff in the successful federal lawsuit against the Biden administration’s continued attack on the First Amendment as a result of its collusion with Big Tech to stifle conservatives and other opponents of its policies.  ,
According to the National Constitution Center, Schmitt recently was appointed to lead the Judiciary Committee’s Subcommittee on the Constitution, which is perhaps little known but has “great constitutional power.” The subcommittee has authority over nine crucial areas, including the DOJ’s Civil Rights Division’s oversight and the enforcement and protection of constitutional rights. It could have a lot to say about the power abuse that the Biden Department of Justice experienced and how to prevent it from occurring again.  ,
Being a watchdog, particularly for Americans ‘ First Amendment rights, is crucial, according to Schmitt.  ,
The senator said that what we’re seeing playing out are the actual threats to the republic and the assaults on the First Amendment by the administrative state, which are antithetical to the founding’s idea of the separation of powers.  ,
Restore trust and credibility, please.
If shaky-kneed and gelded Republican senators don’t succumb to the left’s barrage of fear-fueled attacks against Kash Patel, Trump’s nominee for FBI director should be confirmed this week. With Patel’s confirmation, the campaign to rebuild the troubled Federal Bureau of Investigation would have a significant ally.  ,
They only need to look at the people who are attacking him if reluctant senators require more evidence of Patel’s worthiness to lead the FBI. The Washington Post, whose long tenure as the top public relations firm for the Deep State and big-government preservationists, is just one of the Deep Staters and Never Trumpers. The Post has criticized Patel, who makes the Deep State very enthralling. It has supported the politically motivated prosecutions of Trump and covered for his 2020 presidential election opponent.  ,
Lobbying the Senate to reject the nominee, the Post’s editorial board on Monday hypocritically insisted Patel “appears eager to seek retribution against President Donald Trump’s perceived enemies, including those inside the bureau, Republican critics, the news media and alumni from the first Trump administration”. In other words, Patel would act similarly to the retributionists as they did Trump.  ,
As Bondi noted in her directive to DOJ employees, time is of the essence.  ,
The attorney general wrote that the Department of Justice must take immediate and overdue steps to ensure that the Department’s personnel are ready and willing to faithfully implement the policy agenda of the duly elected President of the United States.  ,
The Federalist’s senior elections correspondent, Matt Kittle, is. An award-winning investigative reporter and 30-year veteran of print, broadcast, and online journalism, Kittle previously served as the executive director of Empower Wisconsin.