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Norms Impact

Mike Johnson Suddenly Knows Nothing on Pam Bondi Spying on Lawmakers

When the Speaker denies a briefing on alleged DOJ tracking of a lawmaker’s oversight searches, Congress’s duty to police executive surveillance collapses into protective silence.

Congress

Feb 12, 2026

Sources

Summary

House Speaker Mike Johnson told reporters he knew nothing about allegations that Attorney General Pam Bondi tracked a lawmaker’s searches of the Justice Department’s unredacted Jeffrey Epstein files, despite being briefed the day before. The episode normalizes leadership shielding executive-branch surveillance concerns instead of enforcing Congress’s separation-of-powers prerogatives. In practice, it chills lawmakers’ oversight activity by signaling they may be monitored—and left unprotected—when reviewing sensitive executive records.

Reality Check

Normalizing executive-branch monitoring of lawmakers’ oversight activity—and leadership denial of it—sets a precedent that weakens democratic stability and your rights by making oversight contingent on surveillance and intimidation. If DOJ personnel used federal systems to monitor and compile a member’s file-access activity for political leverage, it implicates abuse-of-power conduct and potential federal crimes depending on method, including the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (18 U.S.C. § 1030) and unlawful interception of electronic communications under the Wiretap Act (18 U.S.C. § 2511). Even if it falls short of provable criminal elements on the current facts, it remains a severe separation-of-powers breach: Congress cannot function if its members are tracked for doing oversight, and institutional leaders publicly launder the threat into deniability.

Media

Detail

<p>At a House Judiciary Committee hearing on Wednesday, a photograph of Attorney General Pam Bondi’s notes showed a record of Washington Representative Pramila Jayapal’s searches in the Justice Department’s unredacted Jeffrey Epstein files. The image prompted backlash among lawmakers who viewed the tracking as an overreach implicating separation-of-powers concerns.</p><p>On Thursday morning, House Speaker Mike Johnson told reporters he did not know anything about the matter and declined to comment, adding that it would be inappropriate if it occurred. Jayapal told NPR News earlier Thursday that she had discussed the issue with Johnson the previous day and said she believed there was bipartisan agreement that lawmakers should be able to review the files without being surveilled.</p><p>The sequence places Johnson’s public denial after a reported private conversation with Jayapal about the same alleged conduct.</p>