Pam Bondi’s Reward for Total Humiliation
She barked, fluffed, and publicly disgraced herself for Trump, only to watch him hand her chair to Todd Blanche.
First Kristi Noem got shoved aside and replaced by Markwayne Mullin. Then Pam Bondi got booted, and for now the man taking her chair is Todd Blanche, Donald Trump’s former defense lawyer. At a certain point, even people who are deeply invested in not noticing things have to notice things. In Trumpworld, the women keep getting cast as the emotional support henchmen. They are expected to go out there, smile through disaster, defend the indefensible, absorb the stink, and humiliate themselves with gusto. Then, once the job starts to smell too much like flop sweat and panic, a man materializes to inherit the office and play Serious Person.
Maybe that is not misogyny in the neat, textbook sense. Maybe it is just one of those magical coincidences that keeps happening to women around Donald Trump, where they get the public disgrace and some guy gets the title. Maybe the ladies are just incredibly unlucky, forever slipping on the exact same banana peel while the men keep landing upright in the leather chair.
And Pam Bondi really did commit herself to the bit. She did not merely defend Trump. She made herself into a kind of human leaf blower for his ego. At that House Judiciary hearing, while lawmakers were pressing her over the Epstein files, Bondi somehow found it in herself to start hollering about how amazing Donald Trump was, how transparent he was, how wonderful everything was going, as if she were not the attorney general of the United States but the final contestant in a contest called America’s Next Top Sycophant. It was one of those performances so undignified that it briefly circles back around to being impressive. Not morally impressive, obviously. More like the way a raccoon opening a locked cooler is impressive.
That is the part that makes her firing so deliciously embarrassing. She humiliated herself for him in public. She did the full-pageant version of loyalty. She barked, she boasted, she fluffed, she smiled through the flop. And in the end, he still replaced her with his own lawyer. Not just a man, which would already be insulting enough. His man. His former defense lawyer. The symbolism is so unsubtle it almost feels rude to point it out. You spend months turning yourself into a one-woman Trump infomercial and the reward is that the boss hands your job to a guy who used to stand next to him in court.
And honestly, that is what makes this version better than the usual palace intrigue story. We already know Bondi was not pushed out because she had some sudden attack of conscience. Nobody is confusing Pam Bondi with Elliot Richardson. She was perfectly willing to play the role. She was willing to degrade the Justice Department, willing to debase herself in public, willing to perform loyalty like she was trying to win a tiara and a timeshare. The problem was not that she refused to be awful. The problem was that being awful did not save her, because in Trumpworld women are often invited to do the shame work, not necessarily to keep the power.
That is the pattern here, and it is why Blanche matters. If Bondi had simply been replaced by another random hack, the story would still be ugly but ordinary. Instead she got replaced, at least for now, by Trump’s former defense lawyer, which makes the whole thing feel less like ordinary turnover and more like a little engraved plaque announcing who is trusted with real power when the performance phase is over. The women get sent out to stand in front of the burning building and insist that the smell is actually prosperity. The men come in later and get described as stabilizing.
It almost makes you feel bad for her. Almost. There is, I admit, a tiny flicker of pity in watching a woman discover that extreme public self-abasement is not, in fact, a durable professional strategy. It is the sort of revelation that might soften you for a second if you had never seen Pam Bondi’s whole deal before. Then you remember that she is not some innocent handmaiden who wandered into the wrong marble hallway and got eaten by wolves. She is a Regina George mean girl with a law degree, a television smile, and a deep commitment to using power like a hair straightener left plugged in on purpose. She helped build the ugliness. She fed it. She grinned through it. The pity does not last.
Still, there is something almost poetic in the efficiency of the insult. Bondi did everything asked of her except the one thing that matters in Trump’s world, which is never to become inconvenient. She could praise him, flatter him, throw herself in front of cameras for him, but once she started looking like a liability instead of an asset, none of that devotion meant a thing. Loyalty is lovely right up until usefulness expires. Then suddenly it is time for a transition, a thank you post, a pat on the head, and a man in your chair.
So yes, another one bites the dust. First Kristi Noem. Now Pam Bondi. Funny how often the women wind up carrying the embarrassment while the men collect the office. Funnier still that these women keep acting shocked when the arrangement turns out to be exactly as degrading as it looked from the start.




In the words of a “once and clueless friend”…. “Who Coulda Seen THAT Comin’’? 🙄
Honestly, it must be set your clock time…..
And let's not forget the recent humiliation of Trump's hand-picked attorneys Alina Habba and Lindsey Halligan, both shown the door by the courts. If you're a woman in the Trump administration, you should be asking yourself some hard questions.