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Is Obama's call for Justice Department independence an impossible dream?
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Is Obama's call for Justice Department independence an impossible dream?

The Hill · May 14, 2026, 5:00 PM

Key takeaways

  • President Trump has publicly announced he wants the Department of Justice to investigate and prosecute those he considers political foes.
  • In April, Bondi resigned as attorney general under that kind of repeated pressure.
  • Obama s suggestion has some resonance, though codifying a return to a quasi-independent Justice Department would require a cooperative Congress and president.

Why this matters: political developments that affect policy direction and public trust.

In his interview with Stephen Colbert aired May 5 on The Late Show, Obama avoided mentioning the president by name though it was clear that he had the current occupant of the White House in mind when he said the attorney general is the people s lawyer, and not the president s consigliere to go after political enemies.

President Trump has publicly announced he wants the Department of Justice to investigate and prosecute those he considers political foes. For instance, last September he posted on Truth Social an advisory to Attorney General Pam Bondi: Pam: I have reviewed over 30 statements and posts… same old story [of] all talk, no action. Nothing is being done. What about Comey, Adam Shifty Schiff, Leticia??? They re all guilty as hell but nothing is being done.

In April, Bondi resigned as attorney general under that kind of repeated pressure. Although the Justice Department had opened criminal investigations into several people on Trump s political enemies list, only former FBI director and special counsel James Comey has been indicted by a grand jury, on charges of allegedly threatening the president s life based on a photo of seashells on a beach spelling 86-47.

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