ARLINGTON, Va. — Attorney General Pam Bondi suggested Tuesday that she has no plans to step down as she dodged questions about Jeffrey Epstein and her clash with a top FBI official, seeking to press ahead with a business-as-usual approach in the face of right-wing turmoil.
Pressed by reporters during an announcement touting drug seizures, Bondi sidestepped questions about the fallout of the Trump administration’s decision not to release more records related to the wealthy financier’s sex trafficking investigation. With some high profile-members of President Donald Trump’s base calling for her resignation, Bondi made clear she intends to remain attorney general.
‘’I’m going to be here for as long as the president wants me here,’’ Bondi said. ‘’And I believe he’s made that crystal clear.’’
The announcement at the Drug Enforcement Administration headquarters represents an effort by Bondi to turn the page on the Epstein controversy and show that the Justice Department is forging ahead after days of mounting conservative criticism over the administration’s failure to deliver long-sought government secrets about Epstein. Bondi highlighted recent operations that led to the seizure of methamphetamine and fentanyl, including drugs that were hidden in a shipment of cucumbers across the Mexican border.
But her refusal to address the turmoil may only further frustrate conservative influencers who have been calling for transparency and accountability over the wealthy financier’s case.
‘’This today is about fentanyl overdoses throughout our country and people who have lost loved ones to fentanyl," Bondi said in response to a question from a reporter about the Epstein files. ‘’That’s the message that we’re here to send today. I’m not going to talk about Epstein.’’
Trump has been seeking to tamp down criticism of his attorney general and defended her again earlier Tuesday, saying she handled the matter ‘’very well." Trump said it’s up to her whether to release any more records, adding that ‘’whatever she thinks is credible, she should release.’’
Asked about Trump’s comment, Bondi said the Justice Department memo released last week announcing that no additional evidence would become public ‘’speaks for itself and we’ll get back to you on anything else."