Hours before the public praise and polished statements, the relationship between Donald Trump and Pam Bondi was already broken. Their final week was marked by a serious, still-undisclosed argument, and a growing sense in the West Wing that she had failed his expectations on the Epstein files and in targeting his political enemies. When they rode together in a car on April 1, Trump ended any doubt with four cold words: “I think it’s time.” By the next day, he was hailing her as a loyal patriot “transitioning” to the private sector, while reports quietly framed it as a firing.
Bondi responded with grace, highlighting record-low murder rates, terrorism convictions, and major cartel arrests, insisting it had been “the honor of a lifetime.” Yet her ouster, coming just weeks after Kristi Noem’s, now looks less like an isolated decision and more like the opening act of a wider purge—one that may soon claim Howard Lutnick, Lori Chavez-DeRemer, and even Tulsi Gabbard, as a furious president reshapes his circle yet again.
