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Politics & Government

Bondi's Road to Redemption: Deliver on Enforcement Promises

Never Too Late

If Attorney General Pam Bondi wants to redirect the Jeffrey Epstein dialogue and take a step toward calming the stormy political waters that engulf her, she should make good on her promises to prosecute the nation's governors and mayors who have openly defied federal immigration law. When conservatives such as podcaster Megyn Kelly predict that Bondi's "days are numbered," attempting to wait out the brouhaha would be an ineffective strategy.

Kelly stated: "So she's either lazy and incompetent or she willingly humiliated some of the president's most loyal supporters. Neither one of those is good. And that's why, I'm sorry, but I'm going to predict her days are numbered as a member of the Trump administration."

Faith in government has been in steep decline since President Lyndon Johnson and the Vietnam War. Now, just seven months into the Trump administration, a crisis of trust where it is most needed has exploded at the Justice Department. It's time for Bondi to deliver on her promise to pursue legal action against sanctuary states and cities

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The Epstein/Bondi story isn't going away, but neither are governors like California's Gavin Newsom, Illinois' J.B. Pritzker, Massachusetts' Maura Healey, or Maine's Janet Mills, all of whom have made defiant statements that they will not be cowed by federal law, most especially those that pertain to immigration enforcement and Title IX violations.

Opening an investigation into the duplicitous and potentially criminal actions of former CIA director John Brennan and former FBI director James Comey is proper. But those cases, compared to legal actions against the sanctuary cities and states, will be tougher to prosecute. Abundant evidence exists that the mayors and governors aided and abetted illegal aliens. Chicago's Mayor Brandon Johnson and Illinois governor J.B. Pritzker are prime examples of elected officials who knowingly violated 8 U.S. Code § 1324, Bringing in and harboring certain aliens. Since 2022, when the first migrants arrived in Chicago, the city has spent $300 million feeding and sheltering 37,000 illegal aliens. By the end of 2025, Illinois' tally for illegal alien spending will be $2.5 billion. On top of the massive expense, Chicago citizens, especially Black Americans, are frustrated at the spending awarded to illegal aliens while many of their needs remain unaddressed. As one Chicago Sun-Times reporter assessed the effect illegal aliens had on Windy City, "Black Chicago is on life support."

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The lawsuit against Chicago is the first the Justice Department filed since pledging to investigate state and local officials for obstructing President Donald Trump's crackdown on illegal immigration. Bondi followed up with a directive to cut federal funding to sanctuary cities. Illinois and Chicago "refuse to cooperate with [ICE] detainers," according to a DOJ official who spoke to the New York Post. "Instead of handing over people who are in prison or in jail to federal immigration authorities they will just let folks go," the official said.

Pritzker defends Illinois' policy on illegal immigrants by citing the 2017 TRUST Act, which asserts that "State law does not currently grant State or local law enforcement the authority to enforce federal civil immigration laws." Chicago's Welcoming City ordinance is more egregious, prohibiting any city agency or official from arresting or detaining "a person solely on the belief that the person is not present legally in the United States." Neither of these state or municipal laws supersede the Constitution's Supremacy Clause, an argument DOJ can easily win.

Now is the time for Bondi to step up on her promises that the DOJ will hold sanctuary cities and states accountable for their failure to enforce immigration law. On February 6, Bondi announced that DOJ “will no longer stand by as state and local leaders obstruct federal law enforcement efforts, endangering their citizens and the brave men and women in uniform." Bondi concluded, "This ends today." But "today" was more than five months ago. Nothing would restore the MAGA base's confidence in Bondi more than to see the recalcitrant mayors and governors prosecuted, convicted, and leaving the courtroom in handcuffs.

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