The Daily - From Trump’s Attorney to Attorney General: The Rise of Todd Blanche
Episode Date: July 15, 2026To be confirmed as the next attorney general, Todd Blanche must convince members of the U.S. Senate that as political as the Department of Justice has become, it would be even worse without him on top.... As his confirmation hearing begins, Glenn Thrush, a Justice Department reporter for The New York Times, recounts the unlikely story of how Mr. Blanche became President Trump’s legal enforcer. Guest: Glenn Thrush, a Justice Department reporter for The New York Times. Background reading: A single Republican vote against Mr. Blanche on the Senate Judiciary Committee could effectively sink his confirmation, giving Republican senators leverage to extract concessions from him. Mr. Blanche’s cooperation in Mr. Trump’s campaign to identify, investigate and punish those who had once pursued him and his supporters will be a flashpoint in his confirmation hearing. Photo: Demetrius Freeman for The New York Times For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. You can also subscribe via your favorite podcast app here https://www.nytimes.com/activate-access/audio?source=podcatcher. For more podcasts and narrated articles, download The New York Times app at nytimes.com/app. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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From New York Times, I'm Michael O'Barrot. This is the Daily.
To be confirmed as the next Attorney General, Todd Blanche must convince members of the U.S. Senate
that despite how political the Department of Justice has now become, it would be even worse without him at the top.
Today, as his confirmation hearings begin, my colleague Glenn Thrush recounts the unlikely
story of how Blanche became Trump's legal enforcer.
It's Wednesday, July 15th.
Hey, Glenn. Hello.
Good morning to you, sir.
Good morning to you, sir.
Is there an echo in here?
Is there an echo in here?
All right.
Well, on to business.
Glenn, in a few hours, Wednesday morning,
the Senate Judiciary Committee is sketched.
to begin confirmation hearings for President Trump's next pick to be his Attorney General, Todd Blanche.
And increasingly, it looks like this hearing is going to be pretty complicated and the outcome genuinely uncertain.
We're at a pretty precarious moment for the Department of Justice and for Todd Blanche.
Over the past six weeks, really at President Trump's prompting, Blanche oversaw the creation of
this incredibly controversial and highly unusual, $1.8 billion fund to compensate purported victims
of Biden and Obama era Justice Department overreach, the J6 defendants, and people who were
subject to other investigations. And in late May, the Senate Republicans just had it. They called in,
Blanche, and for about an hour grilled him, lambasted him.
told him it was totally unacceptable. So the dynamic here is the Republicans in the Senate have been
incredibly skeptical of recent moves that Blanche has made in coordination with Trump. Now, Blanche has
spent the better part of a month trying to clean that stuff up, but there are still several
members in the Senate and a couple of members on the Senate Judiciary Committee who really have
serious, tough questions for him. And this is really a first for someone who is facing
cabinet scrutiny. What do you mean at first? We're just in a totally different environment than the
first wave of Trump cabinet nominees. They all basically got a pass. There was some tough questioning,
but that was a period of time early on when Republicans were just inclined to line up and give the
president as much authority as possible. We're long past that. And the gravitational pull of the
midterm elections is forcing a lot of these Republicans who had been in line to start raising some serious
questions. So there's a lot of skepticism from increasingly independent-minded, agitated,
midterm fearful Republican senators of Todd Blanche. Let's talk about how Blanche became Trump's pick
for Attorney General, how he got onto Trump's radar and became the person he hopes will
define the remaining years of the second term when it comes to the Department of Justice.
Just tell us the Blanche story.
So this is what's perhaps most interesting.
There are not a lot of data points in his biography that would have indicated he would have gone
down this path.
Blanche, from the interviews I've done over the past year and a half, was a pretty vanilla
federal prosecutor from the Southern District of New York.
It's been described as the Yankee Stadium of federal prosecutor's offices.
It's where Rudy Giuliani sort of gained his fame.
Blanche rises through the ranks of that office, and like a lot of these guys got to midlife and decided he wanted to cash in.
Right.
So he jumps to a big-time white shoe law firm in 2017 in New York.
And at some point in time, Boris Epstein, Donald Trump's longtime legal advisor, connects with Blanche and enlists him to the criminal defense team representing Paul Mavis.
Manafort, Trump's first campaign chairman.
And that really throws Blanche into this rotation of Trump criminal defense lawyers.
And what's fascinating is in the period after Trump loses in 2020, Blanche had a decision to make at this point in time.
He could have cut bait from Trump.
It really looked like Trump was a losing cause.
But instead, what he did was he insisted on representing Trump at this low-ebb moment.
over the objections of the leadership of his law firm,
and actually broke from his firm, started his own firm,
and threw in his lot with Trump.
And like so many of these entrepreneurial characters in Trump's second term,
that decision is what really bonded him to Trump.
He took a big risk on Trump.
And that to the president is really the ultimate bond.
So just to be clear, Blanche quits this prestigious white shoe law firm job.
he has the one he took to make money once he left government in order to take Trump on as a client.
That's the bet.
Yeah, and I think he made a decision that this was a big shot.
Not everybody gets an opportunity to represent a former president of the United States.
And we have seen that element of his character.
It's almost like the fear of missing out that we talk about in Washington.
Blanche wanted to be in the center of action.
And I think he was willing to risk kind of a pedestrian successful.
career in the law to go for the big prize.
So once Blanche decides to work with Trump, what ends up being the nature of this partnership
between defense lawyer and his client?
So the big moment came in the spring of 2023, and when Alvin Bragg, Manhattan District
Attorney indicted Donald Trump on 34 counts, this is the hush money case that involves
Stormy Daniels, diversion of Trump organization, cash to potentially.
pay her off. Blanche comes in and he really exhibits some of this tenacity and willingness to go
to the mat for Donald Trump that has kind of characterized his relationship with the president
and endeared him to Trump. The big moment that people have talked to me about and really remember
was the cross-examination of the former Trump lawyer Michael Cohen. Star witness in that case
because he, according to Michael Cohen, organizes the payment to Stormy Daniels to keep her quiet.
Yeah, and Blanche just sets about in sort of classic criminal defense lawyer fashion to dismantle Michael Cohen,
demolishing his integrity. So he berates Cohen on the stand and just accuses him of being a flat-out liar.
And then he reminds Cohen that Cohen had once called Trump a dictator,
and said that the former president belonged in a cage like an animal.
Right.
He was trying to make the point to the jury that Cohen so had it in for Trump
that he could not be objective and truthful in his testimony about Trump.
Exactly.
And even though Trump didn't prevail, that kind of fight really impressed the president.
And Blanche's performance in general was regarded as being pretty solid.
in a case that seemed to be an uphill climb for Trump.
That said, sources have told me that there was a lot of back and forth, you know, between these court dates.
And Trump, as he is with all of his lawyers, was not afraid to speak his mind, was not afraid to yell at Blanche.
And Blanche, I am told, while he was respectful to Trump, was also not afraid to express his opinion directly to Trump.
So they develop a trusting, candid, maybe even.
at times kind of fiery respect for each other.
Yeah, I mean, like every relationship with Trump,
it's a one-sided relationship.
He's an employee, but he was one of those very few people
who could truth tell to Trump,
who could tell him, no, I am doing this to save you.
And it's right around this time
that Blanche's embrace of Trump becomes really personal.
He switches from having been a Democrat
to the Republican Party and moves to Florida
not too far from Trump.
But of course, the hush money case wasn't the only case facing Trump at that time.
He had other big federal cases against him that Blanche is working on.
This is what really puts Todd Blanche on the national stage.
And joining us now, Todd Blanche, former President Trump's lead defense attorney.
I'm standing here with Todd Blanche, obviously one of Donald Trump's lead attorneys.
Can you talk about his demeanor? How is he doing?
Trump is indicted on the classified documents case in Florida and his activities around the January 6th attack on the Capitol.
Trump is dissatisfied with his initial legal team and he puts Blanche in charge.
These cases should not have been charged, period.
And any way we can get them dismissed.
And from then on, Blanche proves himself to be a manager of this sort of ungainly team,
of lawyers. And if it's immunity, we're going to get that case dismissed as well.
And he hones in on what people call a stall and brawl strategy.
The former president is currently embroiled in several cases. His approach is the same.
Delay, delay, delay.
Run the clock out to get it as close to the 2024 election as possible.
And really write legal briefs almost as if they were true social posts.
Well, what are we doing? I mean, when you think about foreign diamonds for four separate types of conduct
to four separate jurisdictions.
I don't have any clients that have indictments everywhere.
He fully embraces Trump's argument that he is the victim of a witch hunt.
That's been the core of Todd Blanche's legal argument for his entire association with Donald Trump.
And the district attorney has turned what is actually a completely political issue into a political prosecution.
There is no daylight between the two on that issue.
The legal argument and the political argument are completely
And what is so important about those briefs is when you file them, even if they read like campaign documents, they set in motion a clock and a judge has to rule and it takes time.
And what we all remember from that period is that led by Blanche, Trump's legal team, delays these two federal cases week after week, month after month.
And ultimately, they do run out the clock.
I mean, it doesn't seem like it's a super sophisticated strategy, but it works.
Ultimately, Trump resuscitates his political career, uses these indictments as the fuel for his second successful presidential campaign, and he gets reelected and the cases get thrown out.
Right, because as we would all learn during this period, the federal government cannot indict a sitting president, so these cases just fall away.
That's right.
And all of a sudden, this big bet that Todd Blanche made a couple of years earlier is about to pay off.
We'll be right back.
Glenn, talk us through exactly how this bet that Blanche had made to align himself with Trump at Trump's lowest point starts to pay off once Trump is back in the White House.
Well, Blanche wants a top job at DOJ.
He wants the top job at DOJ.
He doesn't get it.
But instead, he gets the position of Deputy Attorney General, which is probably the most powerful.
powerful position in Washington that people don't know about. He runs the day-to-day operations of the
department. And he's particularly powerful because his boss is so weak. Pam Bondi is a second-choice
Attorney General. She's the former AG in Florida. And she's just not prepared for the job. And Blanche
winds up having even more power than most Deputy Attorney General's have. And from the very
beginning, he and his right-hand man, Emil Bovey, begin in acting key elements of Trump's plan.
First and foremost, it involves demoting, marginalizing, and flat-out firing career staff that they consider to have been part of the Jack Smith investigations and other things that flagged employees as being anti-Trump.
Right. They start to fire anyone who touched the classified documents, invests.
or the January 6th investigation, they start seeking out revenge inside the Department of Justice.
Yeah, the first six weeks of Blanche's tenure was just this torrent of stories that we wrote about, teams being fired.
The National Security Division, one of the most important parts of the department, was essentially dismantled.
The public integrity unit, which investigates public corruption, was the core of Jack Smith's team, was reduced from 30 to 30.
two staffers under Blanche's initial leadership.
Blanche saw this as a nest of vipers.
He imbibed the arguments that he made in court.
So he had very little sympathy for most of the people who worked for him.
So he completely reshaped the department and really isolated the attorney general
and the politically appointed leadership from the rest of the building.
So he creates this environment straight out of the box.
Beyond cleaning house at the Department of Justice,
how is Blanche advising the president as he's starting to test the bounds of the law in those first weeks and months of the second term?
Basically, what his job quickly evolves into is fielding these demands from the White House and from MAGA folks outside of the building to go after Trump's enemies or people who have gone after Republicans in the past or to protect people who they perceived.
as being persecuted by the Biden administration.
So there's this mass of energy coming at Blanche of demands for him to do things.
And Pam Bondi as well.
And Blanche has to curate these things.
And this is where things get really hairy.
And Blanche occupies this middle role where he is, in the broad sense, committed both publicly
and privately to executing Trump's desire to investigate these people, while at the same
time putting on his hat as a prosecutor, deferring to his own experience and to some extent
deferring to the career staff and determining what moves are legal, what moves are practical,
and what can't be done. And very quickly, Blanche falls into a pattern of essentially acting as
an advisor to Trump, of saying, you could try to do this legally, but your chances of succeeding
in court are minimal. And the biggest example is.
of this, the one that still looms large over the department, was the decision to prosecute Letitia
James, the New York State Attorney General, and James Comey, the former FBI director, on various
charges in northern Virginia. Blanche advises the president and the president's staff that this is not a
good idea. Right. Just to remind people, Letitia James is indicted on, I believe, mortgage fraud.
James Comey, former FBI director, is indicted for allegedly lying to conglings.
Right. Blanche tells the president, look, you could do this. I'm not saying that it is outside of your authority to do, but that your chances of succeeding with the jury, grand jury and Virginia are very low. And your chances of getting an actual conviction are practically zero.
Right, and he would know because he's a former criminal defense attorney.
Exactly. He's essentially giving Trump the kind of no-b-s advice that he gave him as a defense attorney.
And as Blanche learned then, you know, you could lead the horse to water.
Right?
But sometimes the horse wants to indict the former FBI director, even if the case isn't very strong.
And as we know, without getting into the gritty details here, the whole thing blows up.
And Blanche's initial advice is proven to be right.
Mm, not observed, but ultimately correct.
Exactly.
We should probably note, even though it now sounds quaint, that this is not the typical relationship of president has two senior figures at the Department of Justice.
There has, in the past, been a huge amount of independence and respect for the Department of Justice as a basically independent body within the executive branch.
What you're describing is a version of this relationship in which there's no.
no barrier between the two any longer. And they're basically working hand in hand.
We've had powerful attorneys general, but this is an entirely different situation.
So this view that Trump has of the Justice Department being an extension of his will and Blanche's essential acquiescence to that model are completely new in terms of the animals of the department.
Glenn, what you're describing helps, I think, to explain why Republican senators who are now being
asked to confirm Todd Blanche as the next attorney general have some real questions. They recognize
that Trump sees Blanche basically as a personal attorney atop the Department of Justice. They see
these failed, overreaching, strained prosecutions of Trump's enemies, and they have some real
concerns. And Michael, we have not even talked about the Jeffrey Epstein files yet, which is
a looming huge question. You know, Blanche along with Pam Bondi,
we've reported were the ones who went to Donald Trump
to tell him precisely how many times
and in what context he was mentioned in these files.
So he's playing this very ambiguous back and forth
for all in the Epstein files.
Right.
That's going to be a big issue.
I'm sure he's going to get grilled on it in the hearing.
But look, I think his big selling point to Republicans
is some version of,
I am the least bad option you could possibly have.
As Deputy Attorney General
and as acting Attorney General for the past couple of months,
forget my public statements quietly behind the scenes. I'm working the phones. I'm keeping a lot of
really bad things from happening. Was there a truth to that? I think there is some element of truth
to that. He's one of the most ambiguous, hard to pin down characters I've ever covered, right?
He seems different things at different times, I think because he's a man who's very much in the
middle here. He is, for instance, the guy who seems to have talked Donald Trump out of going after
Jerome Powell, the former Fed chair for these excessive renovations at the Fed headquarters,
that would have put a major, major wedge between Trump and Senate Republicans who did not want
to see that kind of destabilization. Right. And ultimately, Trump drops that investigation,
but he did start it. Exactly. And inside the department, I think probably one of the most
interesting dynamics has been Blanche's conflict with a character by the name of
Ed Martin, who was inserted by the White House into the Justice Department to run this so-called
anti-weaponization working group, which was created essentially to investigate all these grievances
that MAGA and Trump had about the Biden administration. They were looking to prosecution
of the J-Sixers, alleged anti-Christian and anti-Catholic bias, and a whole host of other issues.
Martin is a guy who believes in naming and shaming people that a legitimate use of the Justice
Department isn't just to prosecute and investigate.
It is to just get people's names out there in public in a political way so that they're
embarrassed and that they have to lawyer up.
We've obtained some emails over the last couple of days that show this tension between Blanche
and Martin.
We'd known they had clashed over the months, but what we didn't really know was
Blanche telling Martin, look, you're not abiding by Justice Department rules. You're talking
publicly about grand jury testimony. This is not cool. I don't want you out there doing that.
And eventually, earlier this year, Blanche sidelined Ed Martin. So that, I think, is the biggest
data point that Blanche has, in fact, exercised something of a moderating influence.
And then, of course, there's the anti-weaponization fund. Blanche has tried to play something of a
role on that one too, right? He's attempted to walk it back a bit after the political backlash to kind of show Trump that this is not something that is ultimately going to work out for the administration. But then again, you get that contradiction. He could have refused to sign off on it in the first place. Right. A lot of stuff has gotten past him. And there's no question that the department has far less autonomy and independence than in any point in its history.
Hmm. So where do things currently stand, as Blanche makes the case to Senate Republicans,
that things could be worse. They could be much worse. And these Republicans say,
well, thank you for not making them perhaps worse, but we don't like a lot of what we're seeing.
We didn't like the fact that the weaponization fund got all the way to birth. We don't like
some of the prosecutions we're seeing.
What does that mean for the math of confirmation?
Well, it's a tricky dynamic for Blanche.
It only takes one Republican on the Senate Judiciary Committee
to vote against Blanche to essentially kill the nomination
by boxing it up in committee.
And right now there are a couple of committee members
who have expressed some skepticism about Blanche.
Right now, I would say the main Republican
who could present a serious problem is John Cornyn from Texas,
who was ousted in his primary and really has nothing left to lose.
Right, because Trump is the reason he got ousted.
Trump turned against him because Cornyn was insufficiently enthusiastic
in endorsing him in 2024.
And Cornyn is a guy with a center of gravity.
He is a senator with a capital S, right?
And he was very, very hostile to the notion of the creation of the anti-weaponization.
from more to the point, there was a second deal signed by Blanche that would essentially grant
immunity to Donald Trump and his family for tax investigations. And that appears to be a big sticking
point for John Cornyn, who has refused to commit to supporting Blanche prior to the hearing,
and he's refused to even say that he's leaning towards Blanche. That could prove to be a very
big problem for Blanche if he can't resolve that issue. Right, because that's something that
Blanche has not backed down from, unlike the weaponization fund where Blanche concedes, this isn't
going to happen, maybe it wasn't a good idea, he has never backed away from this IRS immunity
deal.
That's right, because Trump really cares about this.
And if he gets out of the committee, he still has to get confirmed by the larger Senate.
And, you know, that'll happen a month, a month and a half from now.
Dynamics of shifting really early fast, and there are a couple of other senators who could
be no votes. Cassidy, another lame duck senator from Louisiana has shown an inclination to buck
the administration. And then you get Lisa Murkowski in Alaska, who is very independent and very critical
of the Trump administration. She's also been noncommittal. So there's a lot of game here left to
play. Hmm. So what happens to Todd Blanche if the Senate doesn't confirm him? He has been the
acting attorney general for quite a while.
now, does he just remain that way? What happens? Under the general guidelines and the law, Blanche
can remain pretty much indefinitely as acting attorney general until Donald Trump leaves office.
But that said, it is very important to Todd Blanche personally to get to the apex of this organization
through a Senate confirmation. And in terms of the general legitimacy and the capacity to control your own
government. It is really important as a token of a president who sees his power as the central
facet of his political life to get this thing done through a Senate that he, again, views as he does
Todd Blanche as essentially helpmates and employees.
Hmm. So when we think about the bet that Blanche made early on to go all in with Trump and how, yes, it is
certainly paid off in the sense that Trump won a second term and Blanche got to be at the Department
of Justice. The final payoff for Blanche is Senate confirmation. And all the things he has to do
to keep the president happy may make it very hard for him to get these Senate Republicans to give him
that final payoff. That's the central tension of being the Attorney General in Trump's second term.
You know, and that's the big paradox.
What Blanche has had to do to get this nomination, to get Trump's support, might be the very thing that undermines his capacity to be confirmed.
Because this is the Justice Department, even after everything that has happened in the last year and a half, there is the expectation among senators, even Republicans who support Donald Trump, that this department provides a sense of legitimacy, is a bulwark for.
for rule of law and should not be undermined and degraded in the way that some of these Republicans
believe that it already has been.
Well, Glenn, thank you very much.
Great talking to you.
We'll be right back.
Here's what else you need to know today.
So I thought I would just share a little bit about how the threats have affected me and my family personally.
they have required me to, my children, to think about and see things that children should not have to see or think about.
An unusually personal testimony on Tuesday, two members of the Supreme Court,
justices Elena Kagan and Amy Coney-Barrant answered questions from Congress about the court's request for millions of dollars more in security to protect the justices at work and at home.
For some of us, those threats have come very close, and all of us live with the knowledge that they may again materialize.
Kagan told lawmakers that the court expects a 38% increase in threats this year, following a 25% increase last year.
And the Times reports that the Trump administration has ordered federal immigration officers to largely end their practice of stopping vehicles.
as they conduct their operations
after those stoffs
resulted in two shooting deaths
over the past week.
One of those deaths occurred
in Texas, the other
in Maine. Today's
episode was produced by
Muj Zadie, Eric Kruppke,
Alex Stern, and Olivia Knapp.
It was edited by
Rachel Quester and Rob Zipko
with help from Mark George.
Contains music by
Marion Lazzano, Roanemis,
Brad Fisher and Diane Wong.
Our theme music is by Wonderly.
This episode was engineered by Alyssa Moxley.
That's it for the Daily.
I'm Michael Bobaro.
See you tomorrow.
