President Donald Trump is casting yet another Fox News regular for a top position in his administration.
Trump announced on Thursday that he has selected Jeanine Pirro, co-host of Fox’s panel show “The Five,” to serve as interim U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia. She is the 23rd former Fox News employee to date that Trump has picked for a high-ranking federal post in his second term in office.
Trump is notoriously obsessed with Fox News’s programming. The president relies on the network to inform his worldview and provide advice about how the federal government should respond to crucial events. So it comes as little surprise that he has brought many of its employees in-house, with Fox alumni occupying top positions in the White House, Cabinet and elsewhere in government.
The Trump administration ranks are filled with people whose Fox work has gotten them jobs well beyond their traditional qualifications.
And it’s even less surprising that Pirro will now join their ranks. As Fox remade itself as a Trumpist network, Pirro emerged as one of the president’s most notable sycophants. Her personal devotion to the president is impossible to parody — she once described Trump as “a nonstop, never-give-up, no-holds-barred human version of the speed of light.”
But hiring people to lead government agencies because you like their takes on right-wing TV comes with major drawbacks — ones that Pirro embodies. Like others she is following through the Trump/Fox revolving door, Pirro lacks relevant experience for the job she’s been assigned to do. Instead, she has spent years peddling the bigotry, conspiracy theories, and Trumpist fealty that mint Fox stardom.
The Trump administration ranks are filled with people whose work for Fox News has gotten them jobs well beyond their traditional qualifications. Pete Hegseth and Dan Bongino, for example, spent their early careers in relatively low-ranked positions in the military and law enforcement, made failed runs for office as Republicans, and then leaned on their past experiences to become successful Fox News pundits.
Now Hegseth is secretary of defense while Bongino is deputy director of the FBI. They lack the experience typically seen for those roles, and it shows: Hegseth has faced firestorms over his dysfunctional management of the Pentagon and his potentially illegal handling of sensitive military information, while Bongino is under fire even from MAGA partisans who think he is not working hard enough to address their needs.
Pirro’s career has followed a similar path. Though she has experience as a prosecutor, serving three terms as district attorney in Westchester County, New York, that tenure concluded two decades ago after an aborted run for U.S. Senate in 2005 and a landslide defeat for state attorney general the following year.
She promptly joined Fox News and has been a fixture there ever since. Before joining “The Five,” she hosted a weekend evening show titled “Justice with Judge Jeanine,” a reference to her brief stint as an elected judge in Westchester County in the early 1990s.
What Pirro has done with her Fox News platform raises even more questions about her fitness to serve as D.C.’s top prosecutor.
The range of potential outcomes is unnervingly wide.
Fox News’ programming is steeped in fearmongering about the threat a sinister “other” poses to its viewers, from the network’s Global War On Terror-era scapegoating of Muslims to its more recent targeting of Black Lives Matter activists and “migrant crime.” Yet Pirro is the rare Fox star to say something so manifestly bigoted that the network suspended her.
In 2019, her show was taken off the air for two weeks after she noted that Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., wears a hijab and asked, “Is her adherence to this Islamic doctrine indicative of her adherence to sharia law which in itself is antithetical to the United States Constitution?” That remark was part of Pirro’s long trail of anti-Muslim commentary at Fox News, including her call to “start having a conversation about surveillance in mosques.”








