Trump
calls his opponents ‘scum’ and lawbreakers in bellicose speech at Justice
Department
For more
than an hour, he delivered an insult-laden speech that shattered the
traditional notion of DOJ independence.
By Irie
Sentner and Josh Gerstein
03/14/2025
04:41 PM EDT
Updated:
03/14/2025 06:42 PM EDT
https://www.politico.com/news/2025/03/14/trump-doj-speech-prison-opponents-00231438
President
Donald Trump on Friday walked into the Department of Justice and labeled his
courtroom opponents “scum,” judges “corrupt” and the prosecutors who
investigated him “deranged.”
With the DOJ
logo directly behind him, Trump called his political opponents lawbreakers and
said others should be sent to prison.
“These are
people that are bad people, really bad people,” the president said in a
rambling speech that lasted more than an hour.
While
condemning officials who directed the military’s withdrawal from Afghanistan
and repeating his false claims about the 2020 election being stolen, Trump
said: “The people who did this to us should go to jail.”
In remarks
that were by turns dark, exultant and pugnacious, Trump vowed to remake the
Justice Department and retaliate against his enemies, some of whom he called
“thugs.”
It was, even
by Trump’s standards, a stunning show of disregard for decades of tradition
observed by his predecessors, who worried about politicizing or appearing to
exert too much control over the nation’s most powerful law enforcement agency.
Trump, instead, called himself the “chief law enforcement officer in our
country” and accused the DOJ’s prior leadership of doing “everything within
their power to prevent” him from becoming the president.
Trump
charged the DOJ with spying on his campaign, raiding his home, persecuting his
“family, staff and supporters,” launching “one hoax and disinformation campaign
after the other” and breaking the law “on a colossal scale,” making clear the
glee he has taken in undermining the department’s typical independence and
wielding it to achieve the White House’s objectives.
“First, we
must be honest about the lies and the abuses that have occurred within these
walls,” Trump said. “Unfortunately in recent years, a corrupt group of hacks
and radicals within the ranks of the American government obliterated the trust
and goodwill built up over generations. They weaponized the vast powers of our
intelligence and law enforcement agencies to try and thwart the will of the
American people.”
Those days,
Trump said, “are over, and they are never going to come back. He added that he
would demand “full and complete accountability for the wrongs and abuses that
have occurred.”
While any
presidential visit to the Justice Department is a rarity, Trump repeatedly
breached other norms in his remarks as he slammed former officials, unleashed
attacks on private attorneys, and touted his vote tallies in last year’s
election.
“It’s a
campaign by the same scum you’ve been dealing with for years,” Trump said of
the lawyers and officials who have targeted him. “We will expel the rogue
actors and corrupt forces from our government. ... We will restore the scales
of justice in our country.”
The
president sought to recast his fraught history with the department — most
notably the two federal criminal cases he faced last year, one on charges of
conspiring to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election and the
other for refusing to return a hoard of classified documents after he left
office in 2021. Trump also bragged about revoking the security clearance of
“deranged Jack Smith,” the special counsel who indicted him in those cases.
(Smith and the Justice Department abandoned both cases after Trump won
reelection last year.).
Trump
boasted about pardoning hundreds of “political prisoners who have been grossly
mistreated,” referring to the people convicted in connection with the pro-Trump
mob that stormed the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. And he said “there was no better
day” than when he fired James Comey, the president’s first-term FBI director
who investigated the 2016 Trump campaign’s ties to Russia.
“What
they’ve ripped down is incalculable,” Trump said of the department’s leaders
under the Biden administration.
Trump
critics said his decision to come to the Justice Department to deliver such
strident attacks was the real source of damage to the department’s traditions
and its morale.
“No
president has ever given a speech at the Department of Justice like that, where
he railed against his political foes and summoned up an agenda for totally
political, partisan prosecution,” Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.) said. “It was an
absolute desecration of the culture and history of the Department of Justice.”
Raskin also
ridiculed Trump’s description of those charged in the Capitol riot as political
prisoners. “He called the insurrectionists today political prisoners, like
Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn or Nelson Mandela. What a joke,” the lawmaker said.
Trump also
used his visit to offer an effusive tribute to U.S. District Judge Aileen
Cannon, who issued a ruling that tossed out the classified documents case
against him. Prosecutors were appealing that decision when Trump prevailed at
the polls last November.
“The case
against me was bullshit and she correctly dismissed it,” he said.
Noting that
he had appointed her but did not know her personally, Trump praised Cannon as
“brilliant” and credited her for standing her ground under withering criticism
from the media and legal pundits. “She was very courageous and it only made her
angry,” the president said. “They were hitting her so hard it was hard to
watch. … She was the absolute model of what a judge should be.”
And he said
the Supreme Court’s six conservative justices are treated “unbelievably badly”
by Democrats opposing Trump’s agenda.
Attorney
General Pam Bondi introduced Trump by pledging that she and others at the
department are fully engaged in his mission.
“We will
never stop fighting for him and for our country,” she said.
Before the
president arrived, the audience heard from two other prominent Trump appointees
at DOJ: Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche and FBI Director Kash Patel. Both
did their best to fire up the crowd by declaring that DOJ is heeding Trump’s
call to get tough on criminals and undocumented immigrants.
Despite
Trump’s repeated and bitter denunciations of his critics, at times Friday he
appeared to say that he does not intend to instruct his appointees how to
target his opponents but instead plans to trust them to use their judgment to
achieve his goals.
“I don’t do
it. They do it,” the president said, adding later that he might not return to
the department again during his presidency.
Toward the
end of his speech, Trump quoted an unlikely source.
“Etched onto
the walls of this building are the words English philosopher John Locke said:
‘Where law ends, tyranny begins,’” Trump said. “And I see that.”
CORRECTION:
An earlier version of this report misidentified the people whom Trump said
should go to prison.
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