Todd Blanche’s AG nomination shifts Justice Department control toward Trump, reporter shows
A new Justice Department report traces how a longtime Trump lawyer gained independence for himself, not the agency.
Justice Department reporter Devlin Barrett describes Todd Blanche, President Trump’s former personal lawyer and current nominee for attorney general, and how he has helped Mr. Trump gain more control over the Justice Department. For decision-makers, the key consequence is less institutional independence at the DOJ, which can reshape enforcement priorities and oversight expectations.
In a Justice Department-focused report, Devlin Barrett describes how Todd Blanche, President Trump’s former personal lawyer and current nominee for attorney general, has helped Mr. Trump gain more control over the Justice Department.
That is the core issue. If Blanche is confirmed and the DOJ becomes more directly aligned with the president’s preferences, the department’s independence is not just a political talking point. It is the operating system for how investigations, prosecutions, and oversight decisions get made, and it changes what other actors expect from the government when the stakes rise.
To understand why this matters, you have to start with how the DOJ is supposed to work in practice. The Justice Department is not just another federal agency. It is the federal government’s central enforcement arm, and it sits at the intersection of law, elections, and legitimacy. In a typical model, prosecutors and legal leadership draw their authority from statutes and professional norms, not from personal relationships. The independence of the institution matters because it helps ensure that decisions are grounded in law and evidence rather than the immediate political calendar.
Barrett’s reporting frames Blanche’s trajectory as more than a résumé line. Blanche is not coming from a neutral perch. He is identified as President Trump’s former personal lawyer, and he is now a nominee for attorney general. That combination matters because the attorney general is not a back-office role. The attorney general sets priorities, influences internal leadership choices, and can affect how aggressively the department pursues certain matters. When the person in that seat has deep ties to the president, the balance tilts. The report’s claim is that this helps Mr. Trump gain more control over the DOJ.
This story's Key Insights and Take-aways are locked.
Create a free account to unlock Executive Actions for one credit.
Register to UnlockAlways free for Executives Club members. Join the Club
More in Politics

Duckworth turns Hegseth’s testosterone testing into gender-affirming care argument
The senator calls it performative nonsense, then uses a “silver lining” to push broader hormone and IVF access.

Trump’s Thursday election-integrity address doubles down on unproven 2020 claims
A primetime speech on election security arrives after years of doubt without evidence, reshaping how leaders assess election risk.

Trump exempts 20 more polluting plants from clean-air limits in new proclamation
A Trump proclamation shields 20 additional facilities from a toxic-chemicals rule, reviving the fight over cancer risk near plants.

