Steve Bannon delivered an unrestrained message to his podcast audience this week, focused almost entirely on federal law enforcement. “The [Justice Department] is completely corrupt from top to bottom,” the far-right media personality said. “It’s going to have to be purged. It’s going to have to be restructured.”
After insisting that the department will need to get rid of “lots of personnel” after Donald Trump’s possible return to the White House, Bannon added that he sees the FBI as “the American Gestapo,” and he questioned whether the bureau should even exist.
Steve Bannon on Project 2025: We are going to purge the federal government of those who don’t support Trump. We will restructure the Justice Department to prosecute our political opponents. We are going to get rid of tons of personnel on the afternoon of January 20, 2025 pic.twitter.com/lFr9AqeSak
— Kamala HQ (@KamalaHQ) May 28, 2024
It was, to be sure, a striking perspective, but Bannon’s rhetoric didn’t come out of nowhere. On the contrary, Reuters reported two weeks ago:
Some of Donald Trump’s allies are assembling proposals to curtail the Justice Department’s independence and turn the nation’s top law enforcement body into an attack dog for conservative causes, nine people involved in the effort told Reuters. If successful, the overhaul could represent one of the most consequential actions of a second Trump presidency given the Justice Department’s role in protecting democratic institutions and upholding the rule of law.
The report added that under Team Trump’s vision, the prospective Republican White House would “flood the Justice Department with stalwart conservatives unlikely to say ‘no’ to controversial orders” from the Oval Office. Trump and his operation would then “restructure the department so key decisions are concentrated in the hands of administration loyalists rather than career bureaucrats.”
All of which is to say, while the Justice Department’s “independence and impartiality” are its core values, that would effectively end if Americans return Trump to power.
None of this is being kept secret. Bannon presented the plan — out loud, from behind a microphone, while looking into a camera.
At this point, I suspect some readers are thinking, “Wait, didn’t Trump and his team already do this during their time in office?” The answer is, sort of.
As we’ve discussed, the former president spent much of his White House tenure trying to transform Justice Department prosecutors into his own personal attack dogs. The New York Times reported in 2022 that Trump and his team “tried to turn the nation’s law enforcement apparatus into an instrument of political power” to carry out the Republican’s wishes. A Washington Post analysis published soon after highlighted the many instances in which Trump not only leaned on the Justice Department to follow his whims, but also his efforts to push federal law enforcement to validate the “Big Lie” in the wake of his election defeat.
The Republican’s weaponization efforts reached a truly amazing pinnacle less than a month before Election Day 2020, when Trump publicly called on federal prosecutors to go after Joe Biden — at the time, the Democratic Party’s presidential nominee who was leading the Republican incumbent in the polls — accusing him of undefined crimes. The then-president added that his future successor shouldn’t be “allowed” to run against him.
On Oct. 7, 2020, with early voting underway across much of the country, Politico published an especially memorable headline: “‘Where are all of the arrests?’: Trump demands Barr lock up his foes.”









