Former WH special counsel says AG Pam Bondi's job is safe
Attorney General Pam Bondi’s job is safe, despite swirling controversies, because firing her would bruise President Donald Trump’s ego. Former White House special counsel Ty Cobb spilled the tea on CNN’s OutFront Friday, dishing on why Trump won’t touch his top law enforcer, as Breitbart reports.
Cobb, a seasoned Trump insider, laid out the administration’s internal chess game. Bondi’s position as attorney general remains rock-solid, despite the Jeffrey Epstein files saga casting shadows, he claims.
In one sentence: Cobb argued that dismissing Bondi would be a “huge embarrassment” to Trump, who handpicked her for the role.
The CNN segment, hosted by Erin Burnett, zeroed in on Bondi’s job security. Cobb didn’t mince words, noting that Trump would rather keep Bondi than risk the optics of a high-profile firing. For conservatives tired of woke overreach, Bondi’s resilience is a win against the left’s outrage machine.
Trump's loyalty weighs heavily
Burnett pressed Cobb on a hypothetical showdown: Bondi versus Deputy FBI Director Dan Bongino. Cobb was crystal clear -- Trump would back Bondi, no contest. The choice reflects Trump’s aversion to dumping senior appointees, a move that would spotlight his missteps.
“Bondi versus Bongino, to Trump, you have no question that Trump would choose Bondi?” Burnett asked. Cobb nodded, tying Trump’s decision to Bondi’s seniority.
This loyalty to top dogs shows Trump’s knack for dodging political grenades, even if it means keeping embattled allies.
Cobb’s analysis painted Bondi and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth as senior players who’ve stumbled but won’t fall. Both have sparked headlines for “astonishing things,” yet Trump’s calculus keeps them in place.
The conservative base, craving stability, might see this as Trump doubling down on his team, woke critics be damned.
Image concerns persist
“They’ve both been a huge embarrassment and done some astonishing things,” Cobb said of Bondi and Hegseth. Yet, he argued, firing either would reflect poorly on Trump, who plucked them for their roles. This logic exposes a White House obsessed with image over accountability -- a sore spot for principled conservatives.
Cobb suggested Trump views lower-level firings as less damaging. If someone “further down the pecking order” exits, it’s not a direct hit to Trump’s brand. For MAGA supporters, this strategy might seem savvy, but it risks alienating those who demand results over optics.
The Epstein files saga hovered over the discussion, though details remained vague. Cobb didn’t dive deeply, but the reference underscored Bondi’s ability to weather storms. Conservatives might argue that this resilience proves Bondi’s strength, while detractors see it as an attempt to dodge accountability.
White House team dynamics in focus
Cobb highlighted FBI Director Kash Patel’s alignment with the White House’s “team concept.” “Patel has gotten the message because he sort of silently sat on the sidelines,” Cobb noted. This shift signals a broader push for unity, a relief for conservatives wary of internal chaos.
Meanwhile, Bongino faces a tougher road. Cobb warned that Bongino must apologize and play nice or risk the boot. “Bongino either has to come back from the weekend and say, ‘Gee, sorry I had a bad day,’” Cobb quipped, or he’s out -- harsh but fair for a movement that values loyalty.
Trump’s preference for Bondi over Bongino isn’t just personal -- it’s strategic. Cobb explained that senior appointees like Bondi carry more weight than underlings. For the MAGA crowd, this prioritization reinforces Trump’s commitment to his inner circle, even if it frustrates calls for reform.
Optics over accountability?
“If he terminates one of them, he picked them and he put them in those senior positions,” Cobb said, underlining Trump’s fear of embarrassment. This dynamic frustrates conservatives who want bold leadership, not image management. The anti-woke fight demands results, not just loyalty to flawed picks.
Cobb’s take revealed a White House navigating a tightrope. Keeping Bondi shields Trump from admitting error, but it risks alienating supporters who see her as a liability. The conservative base, battle-hardened against progressive attacks, might still rally behind Trump’s defiance.
Ultimately, Bondi’s staying power reflects Trump’s broader strategy: protect the brand at all costs. For MAGA loyalists, this is a masterclass in political survival, even if it sidesteps deeper accountability. But for those craving a shake-up, it’s a reminder that optics often trump reform in Trump’s world.




