The NPR Politics Podcast - Trump's DOJ, Dept. Of State Picks Have Confirmation Hearings
Episode Date: January 15, 2025President-elect Trump's picks to run the Departments of Justice and State faced senators today in confirmation hearings. Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.), the secretary of state nominee, and Pam Bondi, the a...ttorney general nominee, both faced tough questions from lawmakers but are expected to be confirmed easily. This episode: senior White House correspondent Tamara Keith, national justice correspondent Ryan Lucas, and congressional correspondent Claudia Grisales.The podcast is produced by Bria Suggs & Kelli Wessinger, and edited by Casey Morell. Our executive producer is Muthoni Muturi.Listen to every episode of the NPR Politics Podcast sponsor-free, unlock access to bonus episodes with more from the NPR Politics team, and support public media when you sign up for The NPR Politics Podcast+ at plus.npr.org/politics.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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I'm Tamara Keith.
I cover the White House.
I'm Claudia Griselis.
I cover Congress.
And I'm Ryan Lucas.
I cover the Justice Department.
Confirmation hearings for President-elect Trump's cabinet nominees continue today on
Capitol Hill.
We're going to focus on two of them in particular, Republican Senator Marco Rubio of Florida, who's been picked to be Secretary of State, and
former Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi, who is Trump's pick to be the nation's
Attorney General. Ryan, we're gonna start with Bondi. What is her background? Well,
unless you are from Florida, you probably don't know who Bondi is. She was a
longtime prosecutor there and then was the state's
attorney general for eight years from 2011 till 2019. Her kind of coming out party on
the national stage, I would say, would be when she served as a personal attorney to
then President Trump during his first impeachment trial. And after that, she went into lobbying,
private practice, stuff like that.
Now, she was not Trump's first pick. That was Matt Gaetz. We've talked about him a lot.
She was sort of the safety pick.
Right. We have talked a lot about Gaetz and people were relieved when Gaetz was pushed
out of the process. When that happened and Bondi was named, there was a sigh of relief
through the Capitol from Democrats, Republicans talking to me on background, telling me how worried they were
that Gates could get in this position.
So ironically, it's been a big boost to her nomination.
It is clear from the top
that Republicans are very excited about this nomination.
They have called her well-qualified.
There's been no shortage of compliments from Republicans.
Democrats have even acknowledged
that she does have extensive experience as
a prosecutor and that that bodes well for her. But at the same point in time, they certainly
have questions about some of her past and certainly her relationship with Donald Trump
and whether she can remain independent as attorney general.
Yeah, that is a big question and we'll get to that a bit more, but I do want to know
what her pitch was as to why she should be the one with the job.
Well, she's leaned heavily into her experience as for almost two decades as a state prosecutor
in Florida, where she did a lot of violent crime.
She talked about cases that she brought that related to domestic violence, her work as
state attorney general, trying to kind of stamp out the opioid crisis in
that state to fight drug cartels. So she has a lengthy history in which she can point to
and say that she has done a big job. It's the third largest state. It is a really big
job to run an office that large. And so she's really been leaning on that experience to
say why she is well qualified to hold this
really, really important big job.
And it is a big job because it's about keeping Americans safe. It is also a big job because
president-elect Trump has a certain interest in the Justice Department.
He's got a rocky relationship with the Justice Department, I think you could say.
Yeah, and with his own attorneys general.
Absolutely, absolutely.
His first attorney general, of course, in his first term was Jeff Sessions.
Sessions did not last those first four years.
He was pushed out about halfway through.
His second attorney general, of course, was Bill Barr, who was a Republican establishment,
very prominent attorney.
And he ultimately left after clashing with Trump
when Trump was pushing for investigations
into alleged election fraud.
And Barr came back and said, we looked at it.
And Mr. President, there isn't any indication.
There isn't any evidence of notable fraud.
And that was a real point of tension between the two.
And ultimately, Barr left before that administration
came to a close.
Right, I do want to ask you about independence independence because that was an issue with Trump's previous
attorneys general. He didn't want them to be independent and was frustrated when they
pushed back. Bondi was asked a lot about that.
She was asked over and over by Democrats. It's really one of the points that they are
trying to drill down on and get her to commit.
And one thing that I would say that struck me in this hearing,
Bondi was kind of walking the line between the things that people expect an attorney
general nominee to say.
She said that the justice department must act independently, that politics will play no part.
And of course she said that, you know, she will defend her oath to support and defend the
Constitution. But at the same point in time, she very delicately
danced around questions on topics that president
Trump has expressed strong feelings about.
So for example, she was asked quite directly
whether Joe Biden won the 2020 election.
So here's an exchange that, that she had with, uh,
the top Democrat on the panel, Dick Durbin.
Are you prepared to say today under oath without reservation that Donald Trump lost the presidential
contest to Joe Biden in 2020?
Ranking member Durbin, President Biden is the president of the United States.
He was duly sworn in and he is the president of the United States.
There was a peaceful transition of power.
President Trump left office
and was overwhelmingly elected in 2024.
Do you have any doubts that Joe Biden had the majority of votes,
electoral votes necessary to be elected president in 2020?
You know, Senator, all I can tell you as a prosecutor
is from my firsthand experiencehand experience and I accept the
results. I accept of course that Joe Biden is president of the United States, but what
I can tell you is what I saw first-hand when I went to Pennsylvania as an advocate for
the campaign. I was an advocate for the campaign and I was on the ground in Pennsylvania and
I saw many things there.
But do I accept the results?
Of course I do.
Do I agree with what happened?
And I saw so much.
No one from either side of the aisle
should want there to be any issues with election integrity
in our country.
We should all want our elections to be free and fair and the
rules and the laws to be followed. I think that question deserved a yes or no
and I think the length of your answer is an indication that you weren't prepared
to answer yes. And there were other instances where she was asked similar
versions of that question and the answers were similarly long.
We've seen this, this sort of dance that she's done
on a number of delicate questions that I think is,
you know, she knows that president elect Trump is
likely watching and listening.
And there are things that of course, um, he likely
would not like her to say.
I think that's a good way to put it, Ryan, in
terms of this dance, she will have a very full
plate when it comes to navigating Trump's demands and the expectations of the Justice
Department in terms of running this massive agency. And so there's going to be a lot for
her to navigate. And it seems that Republicans are hopeful that she'll be able to pull it
off.
One of the things that was a big topic in this hearing
is the question of the weaponization or politicization
of the Justice Department.
It's an allegation that Republicans
have made against the Justice Department under Merrick
Garland.
They say that President Trump was unfairly targeted.
We, of course, saw two special counsel prosecutions come out
of the Justice Department against President Trump
over the past four years.
They targeted Donald Trump.
They went after him. Actually actually starting back in 2016.
They targeted his campaign.
They have launched countless investigations against him.
Counter to that, the Justice Department would say was that the Justice
Department also prosecuted President Biden's son, also prosecuted prominent
democratic lawmakers, but one of the things that Bondi talked about again and
again, and she said it in her opening
statement and she said it also in response to questions, is that she believes that there
has been weaponization of the Justice Department and she pledged quite firmly that that would
end if she were confirmed as AG.
If I am attorney general, I will not politicize that office.
I will not target people simply because of their political affiliation.
And Claudia, will she be confirmed?
I think she's on a good path, especially for Republicans to confirm her.
I think more of the question now is if any Democrats are willing to help.
All right, let's take a break.
And when we come back, how Marco Rubio fared.
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And we're back. And Claudia, you were monitoring Marco Rubio's hearing. So let's talk about
that. He's up for secretary of state. Tell us about his background.
Rubio comes from very humble beginnings, Cuban immigrant parents. And that's something I
heard is a theme over and over. I also heard about his determination, his competitiveness.
He had dreams of being an NFL player. It didn't happen, but that drive, he took it into
his political career. He became a city commissioner more than 25 years ago, and
that was followed by a seat in the Florida House where he became speaker, and
in 2010 he was elected to the US Senate. But we all know 2016 people got to know another side
of Rubio. He was called little Marco by president elect Donald Trump. But what people didn't
see behind the scenes, what I was told is that he was shaking hands. He was making friends
with Trump, essentially making this unlikely ally to the point where he was considered
to be in the running to be his vice president
and now secretary of state. And he really does look to have one of the easier nomination
paths of all of these Trump nominees so far.
Yeah. I mean, he went from being almost embarrassed by Trump in that primary and following to
working his way back in and ultimately being picked as Trump's nominee for secretary of
state. So what was his pitch?
Well, he made a lot of jokes during the hearing. He said it was surreal to be on that side
of the room and said everyone looks so distinguished. We had a few protesters in English and Spanish.
And he says, look, I get bilingual protesters. He was bragging about that. But he would get
quite serious when he was talking about his pitch to be the next Secretary of State. Of course, this would be historic. We have not
had a Latino in that role, someone who would focus on the Western Hemisphere in a way that
has not been done before. And he also took aim at dictatorships, at regimes such as China,
such as Iran. And he also raised Venezuela. That's a country he faced a death threat from
in 2017 for speaking out against that regime in that time. And so he said he would carefully
thread the needle, kind of what Ryan heard a little bit of in his hearing with Bondi
in terms of navigating Trump's demands, executing his directives, while at the same time trying
to hold loyal and strong to his past statements in terms of taking aim at Putin, taking aim
at Russia, saying that war needs to end, supporting Ukraine, and also saying the hostages need
to be released after the ceasefire deal between Israel and Hamas.
And so a lot of the same themes we've heard from Rubio before, he was very passionate
about it and Republicans were clearly enthused about his nomination and Democrats, while
they challenged him at many moments, they clearly, some of them are ready to vote for
him.
Claudia, sitting senators, I say this as someone who spent time on the hill, city
senators often do get deference from their former colleagues when they have
their own confirmation hearings to go into an administration.
Did you see that here at all?
Yeah, there was a bit of a chumminess, if you will.
I could see that, especially with chairman Jim
Resch as he opened the hearing.
Senator Rubio, this is a long laundry list of crises. You've earned yourself one of the
hardest jobs in America, but after serving with you for so many years, I'm confident
you are the right person we need to take on these threats.
And he made jokes about Rubio and past conversations where Rubio once called
Rich a doofus because he didn't know whether he could take electronics into a
secured room for an intelligence meeting. And so the answer is no. He did.
So there were a lot of light moments there. It was a reminder that in some cases,
these confirmation hearings are
just a formality. All the real discussions have all happened behind closed doors and it's clear
they're just racing to the 20th. They hope they can put Rubio up as one of the first nominees to be
confirmed after Trump is sworn in. So thinking about Rubio and correct me if I'm wrong but
he is someone who strongly supports NATO.
He is someone who strongly opposes Russia, wants to stand up to China. There are areas
where Rubio's at least historic positions are not exactly perfectly aligned with Trump's
views on foreign policy, his more isolationist views.
Yeah. And I talked to Carlos Jimenez about that in the House, and he said there will
not be any daylight between Rubio and Trump. There may be some deviations in terms of their
worldview, but they're more similar than people realize. And we saw Rubio do that in terms
of touching on those nuances. At the same time, Rubio was being critical of Russia
and Putin, but he also made clear he will be following Trump's lead. And I heard that from
Jimenez as well, who said that Rubio will be a loyal soldier. But ultimately, under President
Trump, the top priority of the United States Department of State will be the United States.
The direction he has given for the conduct of our foreign policy is clear. Every dollar we
spend, every program we fund, every policy we pursue must be justified by the answer
to one of three questions. Does it make America safer? Does it make America
stronger? Or does it make America more prosperous?
SONIA DARA I do want to close with this one observation.
Yesterday's confirmation hearing with Pete Hegseth was quite combative at times. He had
supporters in the room cheering for him. The questioning, particularly from Democratic
senators, was tense. They complained that he had refused to meet with them beforehand.
But these picks today, they met with senators from both sides of the aisle. Their hearings
were, I don't know, almost throwbacks. They were respectful and calm. There were tough
questions, but the tone was different.
Danielle Pletka I think it's super interesting how I look at
Senate Majority Leader John Thune in this new role and how this schedule was
planned out.
Initially Hegseth, I imagine, they didn't think would go up the first week.
But this is someone that Trump definitely took a hard line on after we were starting
to hear pushback from senators such as Joni Ernst of Iowa.
Now she's backed off of that herself.
It was clear Trump was ready to go to war
with some of these Republicans, have them primaried if they're going to deny him the
Hexth nomination. On the other hand, when you look at the rest of the list for this
week, a lot of these nominees will have a smoother time in terms of their confirmations.
All right, let's leave it there for now. I'm Tamara Keith. I cover the White House.
I'm Claudia Grisales. I cover Congress. I'm Tamara Keith, I cover the White House. I'm Claudia Grisales, I cover Congress.
I'm Ryan Lucas, I cover the Justice Department.
And thank you for listening to the NPR Politics Podcast.