BREAKING NEWS
It’s Trump’s Justice Department now

President Donald Trump’s choice of Pam Bondi to be attorney general last fall prompted sighs of relief in some Democratic and legal circles.
Trump’s first pick, then-Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Fla., who had been investigated by the Justice Department in connection with allegations of sex trafficking — he denied the allegations and the DOJ decided not to bring charges — was seen as someone chosen because he would do whatever Trump asked, regardless of the ethics or law.
Bondi was seen as a professional with deep legal experience: she had served as Florida’s attorney general for 10 years. It was true that she had served as one of Trump’s lawyers during his first impeachment trial, and supported his conspiracy theories about the 2020 election. Still, Democrats and Republicans who knew her believed she was someone who’d stand up to Trump in a way Gaetz wouldn’t and refuse if the president asked her to do anything illegal or improper.
But since Bondi took the reins, the Justice Department has been operating in a manner dramatically at odds with how it has been run in the 50 years since Attorney General John Mitchell was sent to prison for his role in the Watergate scandal.
Vowing to end the politicization she says occurred during the Biden administration, Bondi has implemented her own regime of politicization, critics say. The Trump administration, with Bondi’s help, appears to be seeking to transform the Justice Department into a political instrument of the president — something that no Republican or Democratic administration has done since then-President Richard Nixon.
In her first month in office, Bondi has presided over a purge of career Justice Department lawyers who are supposed to be protected under civil service rules but who were fired or reassigned without explanation, current and former officials told NBC News. She also backed her department’s push to dismiss corruption charges against New York City Mayor Eric Adams so he could help with immigration enforcement, which prompted the largest wave of resignations by career prosecutors since Watergate. And she has remained silent as Ed Martin, acting U.S. attorney in Washington, D.C., has threatened Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., Georgetown University and others over politics. She has also openly promised to fire DOJ civil servants herself if they “despise” Trump. Experts say that is prohibited under federal law.
“These firings seem designed to make room for someone who is a political loyalist, someone who will do the White House’s bidding, in an effort to reshape the department into something that it has never been before,” a senior career Justice Department official said on condition of anonymity for fear of retaliation.
Bondi has also spoken in nakedly partisan terms in six appearances on Fox News, her only news media interviews.
In an interview with Sean Hannity, she said she was appalled when she discovered on her first day as attorney general the portraits of former President Joe Biden, former Vice President Kamala Harris and her own predecessor, Merrick Garland, still hanging in the secure areas of the National Security Division’s 7th floor offices in the Justice Department’s headquarters.
“That’s how bad it was,” she told Hannity. “So I personally took those off the wall. But that’s the tip of the iceberg.”
Bondi told Hannity she planned to “root out” Justice Department employees “who despise Donald Trump,” and “they will no longer be employed.”
White House spokesman Harrison Fields disputed that Trump was trying to seize control of the Justice Department, saying in a statement, “President Trump cannot be more clear in stating that his Department of Justice will act independently of the White House and any assertion otherwise is a lie.”
But that is at odds with how Trump has viewed and related to the Justice Department in the past. It’s also at odds with how many of his allies and supporters in the legal sphere see things.
“The Justice Department is not independent of the President of the United States,” said Mike Davis, a lawyer and Republican activist who has advised Trump on DOJ issues and who said Bondi was doing exactly what Trump had promised. “Every federal prosecutor and agent reports to the deputy attorney general, who reports to the attorney general, who reports to the president, who is elected by all Americans. Anyone who thinks otherwise proves that the Deep State is not a conspiracy theory.”
“President Trump is doing the unthinkable in Washington — he’s doing what he promised voters he would do and Pam Bondi is helping,” he said. “She’s done more in a month than the last several attorneys general did in years.”
Bondi declined a request for an interview but said in a statement to NBC News: “This Department of Justice is focused on making America safe again, which includes prosecuting violent criminals, illegal aliens, and dangerous cartel and gang members which the previous administration ignored. The Department and its resources are being used to uphold the rule of law and ensure there is one tier of justice for all Americans.”
Outside of television studios, Bondi has rarely been seen in public as attorney general. She appeared in photos alongside other senior national security officials — posted on X by FBI Director Kash Patel — wearing a camouflage FBI ballcap and windbreaker at Dulles Airport when an accused terrorist extradited from Pakistan landed in the United States.
Speaking on the condition of anonymity, three Justice Department officials who work in different parts of the agency said Bondi has not been a visible presence in DOJ offices.
“Garland sent a positive note to DOJ upon arriving,” one of the officials said. “By contrast, she went on talk shows about all the corruption she claims to have found in DOJ and FBI.”
The official said typically people at the Justice Department headquarters would see some public presence from a new attorney general, like appearances in the building’s Great Hall. Instead, he said, the headquarters feels “like a ghost town.”
That is slated to change Friday, when Trump is expected to give a speech in the building — a building where, just months ago, prosecutors were working to try to put him in prison.
A shaky start and a dramatic shift
Just days after her swearing in, Bondi stepped up to the podium in the Justice Department’s seventh floor conference room for her first news conference as attorney general. Behind her stood federal agents in black jackets emblazed with “FBI” and “ATF Police” and “DEA.” Next to her was a woman whose daughter had been murdered by an illegal immigrant.
“We’re here today because we have filed charges against the state of New York. We have filed charges against Kathy Hochul,” she opened. “This is a new DOJ, and we are taking steps to protect Americans.”
Reporters arrayed in chairs in front of her looked up in surprise. Did Bondi mean criminal charges? Was the governor of New York about to be arrested?
It quickly became clear she was talking about a civil lawsuit, not a criminal complaint. The Justice Department was suing New York over policies it says impede immigration enforcement. No one was going to jail.

It was a small verbal misstep, but one that some observers saw as indicative of an attorney general not in command of her material.
Bondi’s larger message that day, however, came through loud and clear. The Justice Department would take action against state and local governments that follow so-called “sanctuary” policies restricting how local law enforcement can cooperate with federal immigration authorities.
It was no accident that Bondi’s first news conference was about immigration. On her first day in office, she issued a series of orders that amounted to a sea change in the Justice Department’s priorities. She disbanded a task force focusing on seizing money from Russian oligarchs and an FBI effort to counter foreign influence operations on social media.
She pared back the enforcement of the Foreign Agents Registration Act and other laws governing whether U.S. corporations can pay bribes overseas.
The orders largely underscored a theme. Many of the programs being eliminated or downgraded were ones that Trump and his allies said had been improperly used to investigate them. Instead, the Justice Department would now prioritize the enforcement of immigration law and the war against Mexican drug cartels that import fentanyl.
In recent weeks, more memos from the Justice Department’s senior leaders, obtained by NBC News, have instructed federal prosecutors to charge immigration offenses whenever they can, and elements of the FBI and the DOJ, including those devoted to fighting terrorism and organized crime, have been repurposed to target illegal immigrants and drug cartels.
Bondi aides have been pointing multiple media outlets, including NBC News, to a series of what they view as significant accomplishments achieved by the Justice Department since Trump took office.
Their list includes the arrest and transfer from Pakistan of a man alleged to have helped kill 13 service members in the Abbey Gate terrorist attack; the move by Mexico to hand over 29 drug cartel figures, including a kingpin accused of orchestrating the murder of a Drug Enforcement Administration agent; threats of federal lawsuits against states over the issue of transgender women playing women’s sports; ending lawsuits begun under Biden that Bondi viewed as supporting racially discriminatory policies; and launching a federal task force advertised as combatting antisemitism at universities.
But a major change in law enforcement priorities and emphasis when a new president takes office in itself is neither unusual nor unexpected. Administrations have long set policy priorities for the Justice Department that change from president to president, and Trump got elected after promising to crack down on immigration and the drug cartels.
What is dramatic and unprecedented about Trump’s second crack at overseeing the Justice Department is the extent of the effort to shape the career workforce into one seen as more willing to do the president’s bidding.
The overwhelming majority of the roughly 100,000 people who work at the Justice Department, the FBI and other agencies the DOJ oversees are not appointed by the president. They are career civil servants hired under federal rules that are supposed to offer them a measure of protection from politically motivated actions against them.
Days after Trump took office, at least a dozen of the most senior public servants at the department were removed from their jobs in the national security and criminal divisions, actions not taken by other post-Watergate administrations. They were offered jobs in a working group tasked with taking action against sanctuary cities. Some took them, some left.
The Justice Department also quickly fired several prosecutors who had worked on the criminal investigations of Trump, while making no allegation that they did anything improper. Many experts say the firings were illegal, but many of the lawyers have opted to move on with their lives rather than challenge them. This past Friday, several other career leaders in the department were reassigned, including top lawyers in the national security division, the head of the office that investigates lawyer misconduct, and the pardon attorney, current and former officials said.
On Tuesday, NBC News broke the news that the Justice Department was sharply downsizing the Public Integrity Section, which for decades has focused on prosecuting political corruption and was involved in the cases against Trump. Prosecutors in the unit, which had employed dozens of people, were being told to take details to other positions within the department.
Bondi has yet to fill some of the key roles opened up in this purge. Officials say the national security division in particular is bereft of senior leaders. But several Justice Department officials said the widespread understanding within the agency is that people sympathetic to Trump’s politics are being elevated to senior jobs.
One official said he had seen an example of that happening. This official noticed a rank-and-file lawyer in the department who is a Trump supporter suddenly stopped coming to work, saying he was on special assignment in the deputy attorney general’s office. A few weeks later, that lawyer was leading the criminal division at a major U.S. attorney’s office.
Not the president’s lawyer
This has not happened before. Over the last five decades, the Justice Department adopted policies and norms designed to keep the institution protected from political pressure from the president.
Among those policies was one limiting who from the White House could speak to people in the Justice Department. Garland was so concerned about distancing himself from the White House that he tried to avoid even being in the same room with Biden, who by some accounts grew angry about how Garland handled the investigation of his son, Hunter Biden.
Attorneys general of both parties have sought to emphasize that they are not the president’s lawyer — they represent the people of the United States.
Bondi, by contrast, has boasted in her Fox News appearances about her close relationship with Trump and her pride in being a member of a team that carries out his wishes.
“We all have known each other, the majority of us, for so long, and we’re friends, and that’s what makes a difference,” she told Fox News host Jesse Watters. “That’s why we’re getting things done so fast for Donald Trump and to make America great again.”
Bondi also boasted to Hannity about the firing of prosecutors who worked on criminal prosecutions of Trump for special counsel Jack Smith, many of whom had long and distinguished Justice Department careers.
“The Jack Smith team, gone,” she told Hannity. “That was low hanging fruit. Get rid of them, get rid of the people that raided Mar a Lago.”
Trump allies who have spoken publicly — including Davis — say the purges are justified and necessary because the Justice Department and the FBI were hijacked by closet Democrats, who worked closely with the Biden White House to target Trump for prosecution when the evidence didn’t merit it.
A Justice Department official, speaking on condition of anonymity, added that leaders did not believe lawyers who spent years trying to put the president in prison could be trusted to carry out his agenda.
Bondi has articulated that view herself, repeatedly decrying what she called the “weaponization” of the Justice Department in the last administration.
“They targeted Donald Trump,” she said during her confirmation hearing. “They went after him. Actually, starting back in 2016, they targeted his campaign. They have launched countless investigations against him. That will not be the case if I am attorney general..”
But Bondi and other Trump supporters have not offered any evidence to support the claim that career FBI and Justice Department officials investigated and prosecuted alleged crimes by Trump involving classified documents and January 6th in order to damage him politically. They have dismissed statements by Smith and other prosecutors that they honestly believed Trump broke the law by refusing to return classified documents and spreading a false narrative about 2020 election fraud that helped spark the storming of the U.S. Capitol.
Shortly after taking office, Bondi announced a “weaponization working group,” designed to review the Trump prosecutions. That group likely now has access to every text, email and memo Smith and his team wrote on government computers and phones. If they have found any evidence of wrongdoing or bias, critics say, they should make it public.
Dave Aronsberg, a Democrat who until January was district attorney of Palm Beach County and worked closely with Bondi over the years, was among those who expressed relief when Trump named her attorney general. Aronsberg told NBC News this week that he still believes Bondi will stand up to the president if he asked her to do something illegal.
“She is loyal to Trump,” he said, but “I still don’t believe that she will prosecute Trump’s enemies for political reasons. That’s where she differs from Matt Gaetz others who might have taken the job.”
BREAKING NEWS
How Trump united Canada against him and flipped its election upside down

The hostility extends to homegrown Trump supporters such as Canadian hockey legend Wayne Gretzky, who was at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort on election night and attended his inauguration. This week, viral photos from a Toronto liquor store showed labels under Gretzky’s wine range altered to include descriptions such as “weak & backstabbery.”
Former Prime Minister Jean Chrétien said Trump had “united us as never before.”
“I think I will propose him for the Order of Canada,” the country’s highest civilian honor, Chrétien joked as the governing Liberal Party met in Ottawa last weekend to elect a successor to Canada’s leader of almost a decade, the highly unpopular Justin Trudeau.
Experts say the man they overwhelmingly chose, Mark Carney, may be uniquely positioned to push back against Trump’s aggression, with a background in finance and crisis management that includes running the Bank of Canada after the 2008 global financial crisis and the Bank of England during the Brexit process.
Like Trump, Carney, who took office as prime minister on Friday, spent much of his life in the private sector and had never held elected office before becoming his country’s leader.
“He’s been sort of the global elite all his life,” Malloy said. “Normally, that’s not really the route for success for a rookie politician. But these are unusual times.”
‘Resurrected from the dead’
Only a few months ago, the Liberals under Trudeau were looking like “absolute toast” in the next Canadian election, which is required to take place by October of this year, Malloy said.
With his approval rating already at an all-time low, Trudeau’s problems were only compounded by Trump’s tariff threats, which began shortly after he was elected in November.
Internal disagreement over how to respond to those threats created turmoil among the Liberals, with Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland’s scathing resignation letter in December ultimately forcing Trudeau to announce he would step down.

It seemed almost certain the Liberals would be thrashed in the next election by the Conservative Party, led by Pierre Poilievre.
Poilievre, whose style has been described as “Trump light,” had embraced the populist wing of his party, expressing support for truckers who paralyzed Ottawa with anti-vaccine protests in 2022. Among his supporters was Elon Musk.
Then Trump happened.
On his first day in office, Trump announced a 25% tariff on imports from Canada and Mexico, two of the biggest U.S. trading partners. Those tariffs were paused for a month before going into effect on March 4. Markets immediately began convulsing, and in the days that followed, Trump exempted more than a third of goods coming from Canada until April 2.
Trump said he was imposing the tariffs on Canada and Mexico because of their role in the U.S. fentanyl crisis and illegal immigration, mystifying Canadians who point to the U.S. government’s own data showing that Canada is responsible for less than 1% of the fentanyl and undocumented migrants coming across the northern and southern U.S. borders.
Canada is also subject to the 25% U.S. tariff on steel and aluminum imports that took effect globally on Wednesday.
Ottawa responded to those tariffs with its own levies on some $21 billion worth of U.S. goods, and it has also requested a dispute consultation at the World Trade Organization.
Alongside the tariffs, Trump has repeatedly referred to Trudeau as the “governor” of Canada, which with 40 million people has about the same population as California.
Trump’s derision continued on Thursday even as his secretary of state, Marco Rubio, made his first official trip to Canada for a meeting of top diplomats from the Group of Seven industrialized democracies.
“To be honest with you, Canada only works as a state,” Trump said from the Oval Office.
Asked about the issue on Friday, Rubio said it had not come up at the G7 meeting but that there was a “disagreement” between Trump’s position and the position of the Canadian government.
Canadian Foreign Minister Mélanie Joly said she told Rubio that “Canada’s sovereignty is not up to debate.”
“You’re in our country, you respect our people. Period,” she said at a news conference after the meeting in La Malbaie, Quebec.
Fueled by anger at Trump, Canadians have expressed growing support for the Liberals in the upcoming election, almost entirely closing the gap with the Conservatives in a matter of weeks. The Conservatives, who had a lead of almost 20 points a month ago, are now ahead by only 1 percentage point, the Canadian polling firm Nanos said this week.
“The Liberals have basically been resurrected from the dead” because of the crisis Trump created, Malloy said.
As Carney took office on Friday, he rejected Trump’s statehood proposal, saying “America is not Canada.”
“We will never, ever, in any way, shape or form, be part of the United States,” Carney, who turns 60 on Sunday, said after being sworn in.

Though Carney is a novice politician, that could work in his favor, said Maite Gonzalez Latorre, a program assistant at the Atlantic Council in Washington who is from Edmonton, Alberta.
“Mark Carney has experience in the U.K., he has experience in Canada, but he also has private sector experience,” Gonzalez Latorre said, “which I think will give him an advantage, especially when it comes to tariffs and and speaking with Trump directly.”
Carney’s top concerns for the moment, she said, are how to deal with Trump and how the U.S. tariffs are going to affect Canadians. His next moves and Trump’s response to them will influence when Carney calls the election, which could still end in victory for the Conservatives.
As with so many of Trump’s policies and actions, Malloy said, it remains unclear what exactly he is trying to achieve with his antagonism toward Canada.
His actions may have sidelined a potential ally in Poilievre, “who would have been a relatively supportive leader,” Malloy said. And though he took down Trudeau, Trump also revived the fortunes of Trudeau’s party, which is staunchly opposed to his policies.
“What is Mr. Trump’s endgame other than chaos? And what’s the point?” Malloy said. “Because so far, he’s only doing things that hurt his interests and the interests of the United States.”
BREAKING NEWS
Vance discusses Elon Musk and the economy in NBC News interview

WASHINGTON — Vice President JD Vance acknowledged Friday that Elon Musk has made “mistakes” while executing mass firings of federal employees and emphasized that he believes there are “a lot of good people who work in the government.”
“Elon himself has said that sometimes you do something, you make a mistake, and then you undo the mistake. I’m accepting of mistakes,” Vance said in an interview with NBC News.
“I also think you have to quickly correct those mistakes. But I’m also very aware of the fact that there are a lot of good people who work in the government — a lot of people who are doing a very good job. And we want to try to preserve as much of what works in government as possible, while eliminating what doesn’t work.”
Vance’s gentler tone represented a contrast from the chainsaw approach that Musk, the world’s wealthiest man, has taken as he leads President Donald Trump’s initiative to slash federal spending and reorient the federal bureaucracy. The firings of thousands of government employees has been the centerpiece of Musk’s work over the first seven weeks of Trump’s second White House administration, with the cuts yielding lawsuits and pushback from judges. Musk has broadly characterized federal workers as “fraudsters” who can’t be trusted to do their jobs.
“I think some people clearly are collecting a check and not doing a job,” Vance said when asked about such comments from Musk. “Now, how many people is that? I don’t know, in a 3 million-strong federal workforce, whether it’s a few thousand or much larger than that.”
“However big the problem is, it is a problem when people are living off the generosity of the American taxpayer in a civil service job and not doing the people’s business,” he added. “That doesn’t distract or detract from the fact that you do have a lot of great civil servants who are doing important work. But I think most of those great civil servants would say we want to be empowered to do our job. We don’t want the person who doesn’t show up five days a week to make it harder for us to do what we need to do.”
Vance’s comments came during an exclusive and wide-ranging interview aboard Air Force Two, as the vice president and second lady Usha Vance returned from a visit to a plastics factory in Bay City, Michigan. His motorcade’s ride into town illustrated how different life is now for him and his young family.
Dozens of protesters had lined the street leading to the factory, greeting Vance and his traveling party with middle fingers and vulgar signs, one of which featured a crossed-out swastika and read “Go home, scumbag.” The previous night, Vance was booed while arriving for a performance at the Kennedy Center in Washington. And while walking with his 3-year-old daughter near their home in Ohio last weekend, Vance found himself in a civil but, in his description, upsetting conversation with pro-Ukraine demonstrators.
“The thing at the Kennedy Center I thought was funny,” Vance said aboard his plane Friday afternoon. “The thing by my house I thought was kind of annoying. I think you just kind of take the good with the bad. … I kind of just see it as, depending on your perspective, a feature or a bug of this new life.”
In his remarks at the factory, where he was welcomed by a friendlier, pro-Trump audience filled with local Republicans, Vance touted the administration’s commitment to manufacturing and economic recovery while tempering expectations for the rapid turnaround that Trump promised on the campaign trail.
A majority of respondents in two polls released this week — 56% of adults surveyed by CNN, 54% of registered voters surveyed by Quinnipiac University — said they disapproved of how Trump is handling the economy. Meanwhile, Trump’s push for tariffs on foreign products has ignited fears of a trade war that could raise consumer prices.
“Now I have to be honest with you,” Vance said in Bay City. “The road ahead of us is long, but we are already, in just seven short weeks, starting to see early indications of the president’s vision becoming our shared American reality.”
During the campaign, Vance frequently spoke of a woman he had met who said that she and her husband could no longer afford their weekly tradition of grilling steaks on Friday nights. Reminded of that story aboard his plane Friday, Vance described recent lower gas prices as a positive sign.
Vance also acknowledged that “you already see things leveling off to, not an ideal situation, but a much better and more significant improvement” while casting blame on former President Joe Biden, whose policies he said had left Trump in a hole.
“My ambition is that we see some pretty quick results, that you start to see at least a pathway towards financial stability,” said Vance, specifically noting 10,000 manufacturing jobs added last month. “You’re going to see progress. I think it’s going to be incremental progress. But I also think it’s important to be honest with people that you don’t get to $2 trillion deficits overnight. You’re not going to get out of $2 trillion deficits overnight.”
Vance also discussed his early role in shaping and articulating Trump’s foreign policy agenda, from a provocative speech at last month’s Munich Security Conference to an extraordinary Oval Office clash two weeks ago with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, whom Vance had accused of being insufficiently thankful for U.S. aid.
“I just try not to be overly scripted,” Vance said before recalling his speech in Munich, which upbraided European leaders over issues such as free speech and mass migration. “The classic thing to do in Munich would have been to show up and give a speech about NATO or give a speech about where the Ukraine-Russia thing was at that moment in time, and just sort of thought to myself, like, ‘What is it that I think is really important to say?’ And the president was OK with me saying it, so I said it.”
Vance added that he doesn’t “go into these things trying to be like a spokesman for the administration. Some of that happens naturally, but fundamentally, the president is the spokesman for the administration, and everything flows from there. I try to do a good job. I try to say things both that I think are true but also are in accordance with the president’s preferences. And let the chips fall where they may.”
Trump, who is constitutionally barred from serving another term, raised eyebrows in a Fox News interview last month by saying it was “too early” to anoint Vance as his successor in 2028. Vance and others close to Trump have since brushed off the question and Trump’s answer to it, agreeing that such talk was premature.
Asked a variation of the question Friday — does he view himself as Trump’s successor? — Vance replied that he’s not thinking about a presidential campaign at the moment. He related the story of how he felt on Election Night, when, surrounded by his closest friends and family, it became clear he had won the vice presidency.
“Wow, I’m the vice president-elect of the United States,” Vance recalled thinking. “And, you know, if I never go further in politics, I’m totally fine with that, but we get a really good opportunity to do a lot of really good s— the next four years.”
“If I do really well for the next four years, everything else will take care of itself. … Now, like, yeah, in two and a half years, will that become harder? Will people be more focused on politics than on what the White House is maybe doing that particular day? Maybe,” he added.
“I mean, man, if I was like a central figure to getting the Russia-Ukraine crisis solved, who gives a s— what I do after this?” Vance said. “That’s kind of the attitude I take. So I’m very focused on doing a good job.”
BREAKING NEWS
Senate votes on government funding bill today; Trump delivers remarks at DOJ

Democratic campaign committees and state parties are partnering to host a series of town halls in Republican-held districts after congressional Republicans were advised against holding more town hall-style events in person following tense interactions that went viral.
The list of districts where Democrats plan to hold events includes several that are held by GOP lawmakers who are expected to have close House races next year: Rep. Juan Ciscomani in Arizona’s 6th District, Rep. Gabe Evans in Colorado’s 8th District, Rep. Zach Nunn in Iowa’s 3rd District, Rep. John James in Michigan’s 10th District, Rep. Don Bacon in Nebraska’s 2nd District, and Reps. Ryan Mackenzie and Rob Bresnahan in Pennsylvania’s 7th and 8th districts, respectively.
Democratic National Committee Chair Ken Martin said in a statement that Republican lawmakers are “terrified to be in the same room as the people who sent them to Washington.”
“If they won’t talk to their own voters, then Democrats will. That’s why we’ll be hosting People’s Town Halls in all 50 states across the country, starting now with vulnerable GOP-held target districts. Working families deserve to have their voices heard, even if Republicans want to ignore them,” Martin added.
Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee Chair Susan DelBene, D-Wash., said in a statement that congressional Republicans “are failing to do the most basic aspect of their jobs: meeting with the people they represent.”
The move from Democrats, who have been on their heels since the start of the Trump administration, comes after several GOP lawmakers were confronted at town halls in their districts.
In one instance, videos showed attendees booing Sen. Roger Marshall, R-Kan., after he defended Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency. In another instance, Rep. Keith Self, R-Texas, was confronted with chants of “Vote you out,” at one of his town halls.
Republicans have accused Democrats of organizing protesters to attend Republican-led town halls and disrupting them.
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