www.newsbusters.org
House Democrat on MS NOW: ‘Good Riddance’ to Bondi, Replacement Names are ‘Jokes’
MS NOW's Deadline: White House, or the Nicolle Wallace show, is where Democrats go to hear other Democrats throw rhetorical bombs at the Republicans. No one is any good in the GOP.
On Thursday, Rep. Zoe Lofgren (D-Calif.) greeted Attorney General Pam Bondi's dismissal with a“good riddance”—then dismissed every potential replacement, all while being encouraged by host Alicia Menendez.
Lofgren didn’t limit herself to criticism of Bondi’s tenure:
LOFGREN: Good riddance to Pam Bondi. But good luck to us for who might come next.
She then turned her disdain on possible successors. Menendez named some rumored replacements -- "Lee Zeldin, Jeannine Pirro, Alina Habba" -- and asked if any of these people were “actually confirmable” or someone Republicans could “get behind,” Lofgren rejected them wholesale:
LOFGREN: None. None. Not those names . . . These people are jokes.
Lofgren went on to deride multiple figures as “an embarrassment,” claim another “got thrown out of court,” and suggest others were unfit for the role.
Menendez added the name of Sen. Mike Lee (R-Utah): "It was posited to me that his Republican colleagues just want him out of the Senate so badly that they saw an opening." Even then, Lofgren said Lee was someone she had worked with and could “talk to”—she remained dismissive:
LOFGREN: No. I don’t think he would be a good AG.
Rather than push back, Menendez repeatedly steered the conversation toward further criticism—first by inviting Lofgren to assess confirmability, then by introducing additional names only to have them dismissed.
Dem on MS NOW: 'Good Riddance' To Pam Bondi pic.twitter.com/R1v4SgKJqP
— Mark Finkelstein (@markfinkelstein) April 2, 2026
Menendez went further still, raising the prospect of professional consequences and asking what “accountability” should look like for Bondi. Lofgren responded by suggesting Bondi’s conduct could raise questions about her ethics, floating the possibility she could be disbarred.
Later, Menendez pressed Lofgren to elaborate on the “damage” Bondi had allegedly done to the Department of Justice, framing her tenure as harmful even apart from specific outcomes, citing "the time, the money, the pain, the damage to our democratic institutions."
As usual, Democrats on either side of these interviews pretend that the Justice Department under Biden or Obama was so pristinely apolitical. The result was not simply criticism, but a sustained, host-enabled pile-on—beginning with “good riddance” and extending to blanket condemnation of any potential successor.
The liberal media recently expressed outrage over Donald Trump’s rough remarks on the passing of Robert Mueller. On Deadline: White House, however, a Democratic lawmaker’s “good riddance” drew no pushback—and was instead followed by prompts to escalate the criticism.
Here's the transcript.
MS NOW
Deadline White House
4/2/26
4:24 pm EDT
ZOE LOFGREN: It's hard to know with this president what's motivating him. She completely embarrassed herself. But it could be that she's failed to convict people, without any cause, people who are his enemies.
Certainly, the Epstein files have not been handled well. People across the country now believe that there may be a reason why President Trump is trying to hide the files, when before people were giving him the benefit of the doubt.
So this has been a bad situation for her and for the president, but I don't assume that her replacement will be something we'll cheer.
I understand Todd Blanche is going to be filling in. He's the guy who went down and coddled Ghislaine Maxwell, who's serving time for child abuse, moved her to a country club prison after the interview.
So good riddance to Pam Bondi. But good luck to us for who might come next.
ALICIA MENENDEZ: Well, let's talk about some of the other names that are circulating. You referenced Todd Blanche. We've also heard from our colleagues Lee Zeldin, Alina Habba, Janine Pirro. The question, of course, who on that list is actually confirmable? Is there someone here Republicans can get behind?
LOFGREN: None. None. Not those names. I mean, Zeldin is violating the law constantly in his current position. He's been called out on it by myself and others in the Science Committee. Pirro has been -- You can indict a ham sandwich, but not Trump's political enemies. She's been a failure and an embarrassment. Habba got thrown out of court.
I mean, these people are jokes. I mean, they cannot be confirmed, I would imagine.
MENENDEZ: Okay, let me throw one more name into the mix, because there's reporting today that some senators are trying to pitch Donald Trump on replacing Bondi with Senator Mike Lee. It was posited to me that his Republican colleagues just want him out of the Senate so badly that they saw an opening and thought they could --
LOFGREN: That could be.
MENENDEZ: -- potentially position him. Do you think Mike Lee would make a good AG?
LOFGREN: No. I mean, I've worked with Mike, actually, on some FISA reforms. So, you know, he's not somebody I can't talk to. But I don't think he would be a good AG.
And I imagine that some of his fellow Republican senators might want to get rid of him. Whether he would take that deal, turn in a Senate seat where he probably could serve for the foreseeable future for a job that, you know, he could get fired in a few months by Trump. He's so volatile. So would he even take it? I wouldn't if I were him.
MENENDEZ: I'm, I'm stuck on something that my colleague Michael Feinberg, who served as a special agent at the FBI, said in our previous block, which was, here you have a president who is frustrated that Pam Bondi has not succeeded sufficiently, in his view in bending the DoJ to his whims and to his will. Michael Feinberg's argument was that she didn't just bend it, she broke the institution that once was the Department of Justice.
In your mind, what does accountability look like for Pam Mondi, even as she returns to being a private citizen?
LOFGREN: Well, she has to come to Congress. She's been subpoenaed, and the fact that she's been fired doesn't excuse her from complying with that subpoena. She has information that the Congress needs to get about the Epstein files. Whether she will escape bar association accountability, it's hard to say.
A number of Trump defenders who are lawyers lost their bar licenses. I don't know if there's anything going on in that regard relative to her, but certainly some of her conduct as AG might lead to questions about her ethics and her ability to adequately serve as an officer of the court.
MENENDEZ: I'm just so struck that if you read the reporting, it seems as though the president's biggest critique or frustration was her inability to prosecute his perceived enemies.
But from your vantage point, how much damage did she actually do? Even if she didn't succeed, if there wasn't a home run, simply the time, the money, the pain, the damage to our democratic institutions that has been inflicted. How are you going to look back on her tenure?
LOFGREN: That was the point, I think, to try and harm people who the president doesn't like and who he considers his enemies, whether or not -- they hadn't committed crimes, any of them, which is why the effort to indict them failed miserably.
Obviously, if you are a defendant in a matter, it costs money, it's aggravating. I think in some cases, you know, it may end up helping people.
They're now going after my colleague, Eric Swalwell, who is running for governor of California. And I think, you know, since they've singled him out as the biggest enemy of Trump, that probably helps Eric in California. People are wondering who among the Democrats they should vote for. And I've heard a lot of people say, well, if Trump is against him that much, he must be our guy.
MENENDEZ: It's a truly remarkable day in a truly remarkable moment in American history. And Congresswoman Zoe Lofgren, I am so grateful to you for making time today to be with us.