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Norms Impact

Trump Says It’s His Right to Weaponize the Department of Justice

Trump publicly claims a “right” to turn DOJ power into personal retaliation, shredding the post-Watergate norm that federal prosecution must be insulated from presidential vendettas.

Executive

Feb 5, 2026

Sources

Summary

Donald Trump publicly suggested he would have a “right” to use the Department of Justice to “get even” with perceived opponents. The Justice Department, led by Attorney General Pam Bondi, has moved away from post-Watergate guardrails intended to preserve prosecutorial independence from White House partisan control. The practical consequence is a federal law-enforcement apparatus being organized to revisit and punish officials connected to prior investigations of Trump and January 6 accountability efforts.

Reality Check

This conduct threatens to convert federal law enforcement into an instrument of personal revenge, a precedent that erodes due process and leaves every citizen’s rights contingent on presidential favor. The facts presented point less to an isolated outburst and more to an operational posture—daily DOJ meetings aimed at “punishing” officials tied to prior investigations—an archetype of abuse-of-power governance even where criminal proof is hard to establish from public statements alone. If action crosses into corruptly using official power to target individuals for personal benefit, core federal guardrails implicated include 18 U.S.C. § 242 (deprivation of rights under color of law), 18 U.S.C. § 241 (conspiracy against rights), and 18 U.S.C. § 1503 and related obstruction provisions, but the immediate damage is the deliberate collapse of the DOJ’s independence as a democratic restraint.

Media

Detail

<p>At the 74th National Prayer Breakfast on Thursday morning, President Donald Trump mocked criticism that he intends to use the Justice Department for retaliation, repeating the charge that he is “using the Justice Department to get even,” and then asking, “But wouldn’t I have a right to?” He added that no president had been treated the way he was treated.</p><p>Post-Watergate principles associated with Attorney General Griffin Bell emphasized procedures to keep partisan interests from influencing legal judgments and to protect a DOJ “neutral zone.”</p><p>Since Trump returned to office last year, the department under Attorney General Pam Bondi has moved away from those precedents. Earlier in the week, Justice Department officials began daily meetings to restart efforts to investigate and punish government officials involved in investigating Trump before his return to the White House. The meetings are organized under Bondi’s “Weaponization Working Group,” which is described as challenging former special counsel Jack Smith and his staff, Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg, and New York Attorney General Letitia James, and targeting officials who sought accountability after the January 6 attack.</p>