As acting US Attorney General Todd Blanche faced questions on Wednesday regarding the defunct “slush fund” he helped create for President Donald Trump’s allies, his role in the release of the Epstein files, and other details of his tenure at the Department of Justice, advocacy groups and Democrats demanded that senators reject the nomination of an official who “has made it clear he’ll put Donald Trump first.”

Those were the words of Brett Edkins, managing director of policy and political affairs at Stand Up America, who was among those speaking out about Blanche’s “damning” record of weaponizing the DOJ against Trump’s perceived enemies with “politically motivated” investigations and indictments.

While serving as deputy to fired former Attorney General Pam Bondi and in his current acting role, said Stand Up America, Blanche has led inquiries into Cassidy Hutchinson, a former White House aide whose testimony implicated the president in the violent riot by Trump supporters at the US Capitol on January 6, 2021; the Democratic fundraising platform ActBlue; the anti-hate group Southern Poverty Law Center; and former FBI Director James Comey, whom Blanche claimed "knowingly and willfully [made] a threat to take the life of, and to inflict bodily harm upon” Trump in an Instagram photo in 2025.

“Senate Judiciary Committee members have a duty to hold Blanche’s feet to the fire and demand answers about his record of weaponizing the DOJ to protect Donald Trump,” said Edkins ahead of Wednesday’s confirmation hearing for Blanche, who represented Trump during his legal cases regarding hush-money payments to an adult film star and his retention of classified documents.

“If they ignore the evidence and advance Blanche’s nomination, they will share responsibility for the abuses that follow,” he added.

Along with using the power of the federal government against those who oppose the president, Blanche led the creation of a $1.77 billion settlement agreement to end Trump’s lawsuit against the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) over the leak of his tax records—a deal that included both a “super pardon” to protect the president and his family from ever facing accountability for tax violations and an “Anti-Weaponization Fund” to dole out taxpayer funds to January 6 insurrectionists and other Trump allies.

A federal judge blocked the settlement this week and found Trump’s lawsuit against the IRS to be illegal self-dealing, and Blanche has indicated the DOJ will no longer pursue the creation of the “slush fund,” but advocates as well as senators at Wednesday’s confirmation hearing said the effort put on display the acting attorney general’s unfitness to lead the DOJ.

“The Senate must look at the facts and refuse to confirm Todd Blanche,” said Virginia Kase Solomón, president and CEO of Common Cause, which referred Blanche for a disciplinary investigation after the federal ruling was handed down Monday. “He continues to prioritize the president’s interests over the American people. He orchestrated this sham lawsuit to fleece the American people out of almost $2 billion to pay the President’s allies, including people who violently assaulted law enforcement on January 6, and to provide the president, his family, and associates unprecedented immunity for their misdeeds.”

“The American people deserve an Attorney General who is independent of the White House and has an unassailable ethics record,” said Kase Solomón. “Senators can’t confirm someone who is willing to skirt the law as our nation’s top law enforcement officer.”

At the hearing Wednesday, Senate Judiciary Committee Ranking Member Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) noted that while Blanche has declared the slush fund “dead,” the order to create the fund still exists on the DOJ website and the acting attorney general attacked the judge who blocked the settlement as orchestrating “a hit” on Blanche.

Sen. @DickDurbin: One of your first official actions as acting AG, Mr. Blanche, was to establish the $2 billion slush fund to benefit J6 cop beaters while immunizing Trump from IRS liability. You defended the slush fund by claiming “people who hurt police get money all the time.” pic.twitter.com/06he9g8kLS
— Headquarters (@HQNewsNow) July 15, 2026

At Slate on Tuesday, Shirin Ali wrote that Blanche’s conduct regarding the slush fund revealed that he is “worse than a lackey.”

In the federal case against Trump’s IRS lawsuit, wrote Ali, “the judge’s conclusion confirmed what we’ve all been thinking: The acting AG and the president’s interests in this case were ‘one and the same.’”

“At the end of the day, the DOJ’s responsibility is to zealously represent the interests of the US, not the president, and Blanche has violated the agency’s commitment to remain insulated from political influence,” Ali added.

Blanche also faced questioning on the settlement agreement from Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas), who lost a primary election earlier this year and has been identified as one of two Republicans on the Senate Judiciary Committee—the other being Sen. Thom Tillis (R-NC)—who could vote no on Blanche’s confirmation.

Blanche’s involvement in the release of files regarding the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, a former associate of the president’s, was also a focus of outcry ahead of and during the confirmation hearing, which was attended by some survivors of Epstein’s abuse.

US Rep. Robert Garcia (D-Calif.), who is leading an investigation into the DOJ’s withholding of the Epstein files as ranking member of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, wrote to Durbin and Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Charles Grassley (R-Iowa), noting that Bondi identified Blanche as having overseen the long-delayed, botched release of the documents earlier this year.

“Mr. Blanche is therefore responsible for a DOJ process that exposed the names, photographs, and other personally identifying information of Epstein survivors thousands of times, including information related to more than two dozen minors,” said Garcia. “Survivors have described DOJ’s actions as retraumatizing, and some have reported harassment after their identities spread online.”

Garcia also pointed to recent public reporting that FBI and DOJ personnel were instructed to “find, log, and redact President
Trump’s name from Epstein-related records,” and to a “highly unusual interview” of Epstein associate Ghislaine Maxwell, “shortly before her suspicious transfer to a minimum-security facility.”

“Mr. Blanche still has not explained why he met with Maxwell, what she was offered, or what influenced her treatment by DOJ,” wrote Garcia. “To this day, Maxwell continues to pursue a pardon from President Trump as she resides in a minimum-security facility with amenities that should not be afforded to prolific sex traffickers.”

Garcia said in a statement that Blanche’s “failed handling of the Epstein files… raises serious concerns about whether he is working for the American people or just protecting Donald Trump. The attorney general’s job is to uphold the rule of law, not serve as the president’s personal lawyer. Blanche is unfit for the role, which is why we’re calling on the Senate to reject his nomination.”

Blanche did not commit to personally meeting with the Epstein survivors who attended the hearing when he was questioned on the matter by Durbin, telling him there could be ethical rules that would prevent such a meeting.

“You’re dancing on the head of a pin here,” replied Durbin.

In another call from the lower chamber of Congress, Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.) provided a fact sheet including 15 ways in which Blanche “still behaves like Trump’s defense attorney.”

Along with his involvement in the slush fund, investigations of Trump’s enemies, and the Epstein files, Raskin named Blanche’s “aggressive DOJ investigations into reporters,” his shutdown of a probe into an alleged bribe taken by border czar Tom Homan, and his blocking of investigations into the killings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti by federal officers as more reasons for senators to reject Blanche as attorney general.

“The American people deserve a Senate that acts as a coequal branch,” said Edkins, "not a rubber stamp on Trump’s handpicked henchman.”


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