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The Paperboy’s Secret Taiye Selasi on How to Survive Perfectionism Taiye Selasi Reads “Firstborn Immigrant Daughter” Restaurant Review: Ambassadors Clubhouse The Expansive Joy of Mao Ishikawa Italy Has Failed to Qualify for Three Straight World Cups. Are the Country’s Immigration Policies to Blame? When the Religious Right Came for Martin Scorsese Play Shuffalo: Saturday, May 30, 2026 The Knicks: The Only Game in Town Why “Yesteryear” Is Everywhere Dan Osborn, the Independent Senate Candidate Who Could Tip Nebraska Daily Cartoon: Friday, May 29th The Mini Crossword: Friday, May 29, 2026 “Hacks” Gave Us an Odd Couple for the Ages Inside Lebanon’s Fraught Push to Disarm Hezbollah Should You Automate Your Life? “Greater New York” Takes the Pulse of the City Postscript: Donald Newhouse Play Shuffalo: Friday, May 29, 2026 “Power Ballad,” Reviewed: A Bromantic Conflict Over a Hit Song Donald Trump Gets Even Attack of the “Flesh-Eating” Bacteria Taking Children from Their Parents Without a Court Order The Stories That TV Tells About Online Sex Work Daily Cartoon: Thursday, May 28th Play Shuffalo: Thursday, May 28, 2026 We Found Amelia Earhart, but She Cut Her Bangs, So We Didn’t Recognize Her The Mini Crossword: Thursday, May 28, 2026 All the Films in Competition at Cannes 2026, Ranked from Best to Worst A Prison Escape in Georgia The Whiplash of the U.S.-Iran Peace Talks Julia Alvarez Reads Judy Page Heitzman Daily Cartoon: Wednesday, May 27th What the Pope Said About A.I. Play Shuffalo: Wednesday, May 27, 2026 Everlane and the Death of the “Good” Millennial Life-Style Brand The Crossword: Wednesday, May 27, 2026 Hollywood Comes to Jesus The Kids Are Not All Right at Cannes The Revolutionary Force of Sonny Rollins The Epic Disaster of Operation Epic Fury Daily Cartoon: Tuesday, May 26th Ken Paxton Wins the Senate Republican Primary Runoff in Texas The Despair of the Professor in the Age of A.I. I Am a Woman in My Thirties, and I Am Thriving Play Shuffalo: Tuesday, May 26, 2026 The Crossword: Tuesday, May 26, 2026 How a Small-Town Clerk’s Misdeeds Upturned the Murdaugh Verdict Ken Paxton Wins the Senate Republican Primary Runoff in Texas Why Any Plausible Iran Deal Is a Humiliation for Trump Play Shuffalo: Monday, May 25, 2026 “What I Saw,” by Matthew Dickman Mark Ulriksen’s “Kings of New York” “This Vast Enterprise: A New History of Lewis & Clark,” Reviewed “Ecologies of Perception,” by Terrance Hayes Slide Show: New Yorker Cartoons June 1, 2026 The Useless Beauty of Christo and Jeanne-Claude A Vindication of the Rights of L.L.M.s The Trump-Epstein Files: Look but Don’t Touch Mariska Hargitay Trades Her Badge for Confetti Can Anything Stop Donald Trump’s Corruption? Play Laugh Lines No. 73: Funerals The Crossword: Monday, May 25, 2026 Daily Cartoon: Monday, May 25th How “The Chosen” Spurred a Golden Age of Christian Filmmaking What Dogs See When They Look at Us How Problematic Is Patriotism? The Ukrainian Stunt Pilot Hunting Russian Drones How Trump Created a Slush Fund for His Allies Ayşegül Savaş Reads “Many Worlds” “Many Worlds,” by Ayşegül Savaş The Leader of NASA’s Artemis II Mission Is Still Moonstruck How Prepared Are We for a Public-Health Emergency? Play Shuffalo: Sunday, May 24, 2026 Ayşegül Savaş on Smugness and Creativity Restaurant Review: Cote 550 The Transformation of Elina Svitolina What’s Missing from Belle Burden’s “Strangers” What Jack Kerouac Left Behind The Verve and Confrontation of Lisa Yuskavage’s Naked Ladies How Raghu Rai Captured an India in Transition Is the Working Class Finally Turning on Trump? Play Shuffalo: Saturday, May 23, 2026 Is Washington Up to the Challenge of A.I.? A Funeral for Stephen Colbert’s “Late Show” Dana White Thinks Everyone’s a Fighter A FEMA Insider Says Morale Has Never Been Lower at the Embattled Agency Daily Cartoon: Friday, May 22nd Summer Culture Preview “I Love Boosters,” Reviewed: A Socialist-Surrealist Shoplifting Fantasy Play Shuffalo: Friday, May 22, 2026 How Good Is This World Cup Squad, Really? The Mini Crossword: Friday, May 22, 2026 Why Is It So Hard to Be Ordinary? Will College Soon Be Obsolete? Singing the Knicks’ Praises, with a Dash of Metal Daily Cartoon: Thursday, May 21st Play Shuffalo: Thursday, May 21, 2026 Updated Birdsong Mnemonics for Donald Trump’s America Daily Cartoon Slide Show
Why Todd Blanche Should Not Be Attorney General
Ruth Marcus · 2026-06-14 · via The New Yorker

Shortly before midnight on April 27th, two days after a gunman disrupted the White House Correspondents’ dinner, the acting Attorney General, Todd Blanche, submitted an extraordinary petition to a federal court that had blocked the construction of the White House ballroom. Despite the late-night filing in the case, which had been brought by the National Trust for Historic Preservation, there was no actual emergency; rather, the Department of Justice seized on the moment to make its case that security required the construction to proceed. Attorneys General do not ordinarily put their names on such filings, as Blanche had. But more astonishing was the language of the document: the United States speaking in the unmistakable voice of Donald Trump.

The motion began mid-rant: “ ‘The National Trust for Historic Preservation’ is a beautiful name, but even their name is FAKE.” It said that those seeking to stop the ballroom “suffer from Trump Derangement Syndrome” and “are represented by the lawyer for Barack Hussein Obama, Gregory Craig.” Then it shifted to praising Trump’s brilliance—“a highly successful real estate developer, who has abilities that others don’t”—and to arguing that the ballroom was “being given FREE OF CHARGE AS A GIFT TO THE COUNTRY!” This claim was dubious; the President has unsuccessfully sought a billion dollars in government funding. Yet it was also unfiltered Trump, a Truth Social post in the guise of a legal document, and it was met with predictable failure. But although the document was submitted to Richard Leon, the U.S. district judge who had issued the injunction, Blanche was targeting a different audience of one.

In Trump’s Washington, subservience works. Last Monday, the President formally nominated Blanche to be the nation’s eighty-eighth Attorney General. Blanche, who had represented Trump in his criminal trials and was confirmed as Deputy Attorney General last March, has served in an acting capacity for more than eight weeks, since Pam Bondi was fired. He professed equanimity about getting the job permanently, announcing that, if Trump “chooses to nominate somebody else and asks me to go do something else, I will say, ‘Thank you very much. I love you, sir.’ ” But Blanche used the intervening weeks to engage in what has looked like a manic spree of auditioning for the top job.

Blanche has touted one flimsy indictment (of the former F.B.I. director James Comey, for posting on social media a photo of “86 47,” written in seashells) after another (criminal charges against the Southern Poverty Law Center, for allegedly defrauding its donors). He ramped up a seemingly stalled criminal investigation into the former C.I.A. director John Brennan, enlisting Joseph diGenova, who had represented the Trump campaign in challenging the 2020 election results, to lead it. And he presided over the creation of a nearly $1.8-billion “anti-weaponization” slush fund, supposedly to settle the Trump family’s lawsuit against the I.R.S., for a private contractor’s leak of tax records. This looting of the Treasury has apparently been averted, following a rare revolt by Republican lawmakers. But, for the Trumps, the most valuable benefit of the deal remains—a Blanche-signed addendum stating that the federal government is “FOREVER BARRED and PRECLUDED” from pursuing an I.R.S. audit that, according to the Times, could have cost the family some hundred million dollars. (Asked about Blanche’s tenure, a Justice Department spokeswoman offered a list of “key accomplishments,” including a decrease in the national murder rate, the arrest of numerous alleged cartel members, the filing of multiple fraud cases, and the hiring of additional immigration judges.)

The Senate vote on Blanche’s nomination to be Deputy Attorney General last year was 52–46, along party lines. But that was when his background offered the hope that he would stand up for the norms of Justice Department independence. He had been a registered Democrat until 2023, the Times reported, and had worked for years as a prosecutor in the Southern District of New York, the flagship U.S. Attorney’s office. He was, former colleagues have said, no superstar, but he was reasonably well regarded and even better liked. The optimism that Blanche would be a moderating force, though, seems to have underestimated the corrupting power of ambition. News reports suggest that Blanche has at times urged restraint; if so, his successes appear to have been few, if any. He tolerated the firing of a respected prosecutor, Maurene Comey, for no other reason than her last name. In March, at the Conservative Political Action Conference—not normally a venue for a Justice Department official—he boasted of the wholesale ouster of F.B.I. agents who had worked on Trump prosecutions, saying, “There isn’t a single man or woman with a gun, federal agent, still in that organization that had anything to do with the prosecution of President Trump.”

Last month, a federal judge in Tennessee, citing “Blanche’s vindictive motive,” ordered dismissal of the indictment of Kilmar Abrego Garcia, whom the Justice Department had prosecuted after it removed him to El Salvador, his home country, in violation of a court order, and was forced to return him to the U.S. This month, in a podcast interview with Sean Hannity, Blanche not only discussed ongoing grand-jury investigations into a supposed “grand conspiracy” among government officials to go after Trump but played along as Hannity named potential targets, from James Comey and John Brennan to the former director of National Intelligence James Clapper and President Joe Biden. “All those folks were certainly part of it,” Blanche said. This is the antithesis of how prosecutors are instructed to behave. On Wednesday, the conservative National Review came out against his nomination. “Todd Blanche has been everything President Trump wants in an attorney general, and that’s the problem,” the editors wrote.

A year ago, senators uncomfortable with the idea of Trump’s criminal-defense lawyer becoming the department’s No. 2 could point to Blanche’s testimony before the Judiciary Committee, where he said that “political prosecutions should never happen, period” and that, if pressed to bring a bogus case, “I will follow the law.” Now they have a record against which to judge those assurances. Will any of this matter to Republican senators—perhaps to members of the growing “wounded-bear caucus,” who have been the targets of Trump’s fury? A no vote from a single Republican on the committee could block the nomination. On the floor, just four Republican no votes could doom it. In a Senate that took its constitutional role seriously, Blanche would not win confirmation a second time. But, as John Thune, the Majority Leader, observed, “obviously most of our members are pretty deferential to who the President wants.” Like the nominee it will consider, this Senate is more inclined to consent to Trump than to advise him. ♦