Live updates: Matt Gaetz withdraws, Pam Bondi picked by Trump for attorney general | CNN Politics

Live Updates

Trump picks Pam Bondi for attorney general after Matt Gaetz withdraws

Former Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi speaks during the second day of the Republican National Convention from the Andrew W. Mellon Auditorium in Washington, Tuesday, August 25.
Legal analyst weighs in on Trump's thinking with Bondi pick
02:15 - Source: CNN

What we're covering

• Trump’s new AG pick: President-elect Donald Trump has named former Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi as his new pick to run the Justice Department. Trump’s first choice, Matt Gaetz, withdrew from consideration Thursday as concerns grew he wouldn’t garner enough GOP support to be confirmed.

• Gaetz report: Gaetz was facing significant scrutiny over sexual misconduct allegations and other claims of wrongdoing, which he denies. Republicans on the House Ethics Committee voted Wednesday not to release the results of their investigation into him. Sources tell CNN the committee was told of a second sexual encounter between Gaetz and a 17-year-old from 2017.

• Hegseth on Capitol Hill: Meanwhile, Vice President-elect JD Vance met with Republican senators Thursday alongside Trump’s pick for defense secretary, Pete Hegseth. Vance is rallying support for Hegseth’s confirmation as a newly released police report reveals details of a past sexual assault allegation against the former Fox News host.

51 Posts

How people in Trump’s orbit coalesced around his next choice for attorney general

President-elect Donald Trump’s allies and advisers quickly came together around supporting former Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi as his next choice to run the Justice Department, with many in Trump’s orbit having longstanding relationships with her, especially those who have remained with Trump since his first administration.

Trump informed Bondi that she was his new pick for attorney general Thursday evening at Mar-a-Lago, two sources familiar with the discussion told CNN.

Trump, for his part, has always like Bondi, but she also has close ties to others in his inner circle, including his incoming chief of staff Susie Wiles and his legal counsel Boris Epshteyn.

There’s a broad feeling among those working on the presidential transition that Bondi will have a much easier confirmation process than Matt Gaetz, given her background as the attorney general of Florida and her relationships with those on Capitol Hill, which were built in part during her involvement in Trump’s impeachment proceedings.

Remember: Gaetz, a former Florida lawmaker, withdrew from consideration Thursday as concerns grew he wouldn’t garner enough GOP support to be confirmed in the Senate. He was facing significant scrutiny over sexual misconduct allegations and other claims of wrongdoing, which he denies.

Gaetz applauds Pam Bondi, Trump's pick for attorney general: "She will bring the needed reforms to DOJ"

Former Florida Rep. Matt Gaetz reacted to President-elect Donald Trump’s picking Pam Bondi for attorney general, saying it is a “stellar selection.”

Gaetz withdrew his name Thursday from attorney general consideration as concerns grew he wouldn’t garner enough GOP support to be confirmed.

GOP senators quickly voice support for Bondi as Trump’s new attorney general pick

Several GOP senators are reacting to the announcement of Pam Bondi as President-elect Donald Trump’s pick for attorney general.

Sen. Eric Schmitt posted on X: “Congrats to my friend @PamBondi. She’ll be an incredible Attorney General. Great choice @realDonaldTrump!”

Sen. Rick Scott posted: “Ann and I are thrilled for our great friend and our next Attorney General @PamBondi! For 8 years I worked alongside Pam to keep Florida safe, and I’m looking forward to working with her to keep our nation safe!”

Sen. Tommy Tuberville wrote: “Pam Bondi is a brilliant attorney with a long career of fighting for the Constitution. She will do a great job restoring JUSTICE at the DOJ. I look forward to the Senate QUICKLY confirming her to be our next Attorney General. No time to waste — our future is at stake.”

Trump names Pam Bondi as his new pick for attorney general

Pam Bondi, former attorney general of Florida, arrives to the Fiserv Forum on the second day of Republican National Convention in Milwaukee, on Tuesday, July 16.

President-elect Donald Trump has named former Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi as his new pick to run the Justice Department following today’s withdrawal from consideration by Matt Gaetz.

Bondi’s name began circulating almost immediately after Gaetz withdrew, with one source familiar with the conversations saying they started hearing Trump was leaning toward choosing her by early this afternoon.

Already, Trump allies are breathing a sigh of relief.

“Pam is a solid choice,” one source close to Trump said. “Feel much better about her chances.”

This post has been updated with details about the conversations surrounding Bondi’s selection.

Democratic Sen. Bob Casey concedes to Republican Dave McCormick in high-stakes Pennsylvania Senate race

Republican Dave McCormick will defeat Pennsylvania Sen. Bob Casey in their high-stakes Senate race. Casey conceded the race to McCormick in a Thursday video post on X.

Casey, a three-term incumbent, was favored for most of his campaign with McCormick, a former hedge fund executive who lost a bid for the GOP nomination in 2022.

Republicans and Democrats alike spent big in Pennsylvania as the Keystone State emerged as a pivotal battleground up and down the ballot. McCormick’s victory means Pennsylvania will, for at least the next four years, be one of the few states with senators from different parties. Democratic Sen. John Fetterman beat Mehmet Oz, the famed television doctor, in 2022, for his first six-year term.

Where things stand: This was the final uncalled Senate race, and the balance of power in the upper chamber of Congress now stands at 53 seats for Republicans to 47 for Democrats. The Democratic total includes two independent senators who caucus with the party.

While President-elect Donald Trump completed a sweep of the nation’s seven key battleground states, down-ballot contests were not always aligned with the presidential race. Democratic Senate candidates won in Wisconsin, Nevada, Michigan and Arizona.

Casey had hoped to add a fifth state to that tally of Democratic Senate victories in battlegrounds, but narrowly fell to McCormick.

Biden chief of staff hosted dinner for Susie Wiles with other former White House chiefs of staff

President Joe Biden’s chief of staff, Jeff Zients, hosted a dinner at his home on Tuesday with incoming Trump administration chief of staff Susie Wiles and former chiefs of staff from previous administrations.

In addition to Wiles, Bill Daley, Reince Priebus, Denis McDonough, Josh Bolten, Andrew Card Jr., Mack McLarty, Samuel Skinner and Jack Watson attended, according to a person familiar with the dinner. Zients and Wiles have had a cordial relationship for months now.

Wiles was talkative, the source said, and everyone shared their advice about the role — though, of course, only Wiles and Priebus had the experience of serving Donald Trump.

The Tuesday dinner at Zients’ house was planned about a month before the election, and Wiles was extended an invitation once she was named the incoming chief of staff for the Trump White House, according to people familiar with the arrangements. At this week’s dinner, the group agreed they would convene again formally to give Wiles advice after the second Trump term begins, they said.

This gathering of former White House chiefs of staff is a tradition that has been in place for a number of past administrations — for example, after Zients assumed his current role, some of the former chiefs of staff gathered together in March of 2023 to offer him advice.

Here's what to know about Gaetz's withdrawal from attorney general consideration

President-elect Donald Trump's nominee to be attorney general, former Rep. Matt Gaetz, closes a door to a private meeting with Vice President-elect JD Vance and Republican Senate Judiciary Committee members at the Capitol in Washington, DC, on November 20.

Former Florida Rep. Matt Gaetz on Thursday withdrew his name from consideration for President-elect Donald Trump’s attorney general, and wrote on social media that his nomination “was unfairly becoming a distraction” for the incoming administration.

Trump praised Gaetz after the announcement, writing in a post on Truth Social that his choice to run the Justice Department, “was doing very well but, at the same time, did not want to be a distraction for the Administration, for which he has much respect.”

Sources later told CNN that Trump himself called Gaetz on Thursday morning to tell him he didn’t have enough support in the Senate to be confirmed for the position, based on the president-elect’s discussions with lawmakers.

Gaetz met with Republican senators Wednesday as Trump’s transition team tried to gauge whether he would win enough GOP support to be confirmed — and as Democrats pushed for the release of a House Ethics Committee report into allegations of sexual misconduct and other wrongdoing by the former congressman.

Trump’s team believed more damning information was still to come from the ethics report, a source told CNN.

Here’s what else to know about Gaetz’s withdrawal:

  • How doubts arose about confirmation possibility: Many allies and advisers in Trump’s orbit had serious doubts over whether Gaetz would be able to be confirmed by the Senate, two sources familiar with the discussions told CNN. Those doubts had been directly shared with Trump, the sources said, even as the president-elect believed he was the right person to “disrupt” the Department of Justice. Sources briefed on Wednesday’s meetings said they felt like Republican senators had kept an open mind to Gaetz, but there was clear uneasiness in the Senate about what could still unfold regarding the allegations against him.
  • Trump does not have a backup attorney general: Trump does not have a new name in mind for attorney general and now returns to the drawing board, two people familiar with the matter tell CNN. He had struggled to find a candidate he liked initially, which is what led him to Gaetz in the first place. Some in his orbit have speculated that he may defer to his pick for deputy attorney general, his personal attorney Todd Blanche.
  • Can Gaetz return to Congress? Senior congressional leaders in both parties are scrambling to determine if Gaetz can return to the House next year, after initially saying he was leaving Congress to pursue the attorney general role. An early consensus is emerging at all levels of House leadership: Lawmakers and senior aides believe Gaetz can still return in January, according to more than a dozen sources.
  • House Ethics Committee probe: Gaetz threw another curveball at the House Ethics Committee by withdrawing from consideration for attorney general. The panel is expected to vote on the final report on December 5, after Republicans blocked to release the damaging findings on Wednesday. Sources tell CNN that the committee was told of a second sexual encounter between Gaetz and a 17-year-old at a party in 2017.

Trump called Gaetz Thursday morning and told him he didn't have the votes to be confirmed, source says

President-elect Donald Trump called Matt Gaetz Thursday morning and told him he did not have the votes in the Senate to get confirmed based on conversations Trump had with senators, according to a source with direct knowledge of the call.

The source insisted that Trump did not ask Gaetz to drop out and allowed Gaetz to come to that conclusion himself, which he quickly did.

Remember: Gaetz wrote on social media on Thursday that his nomination “was unfairly becoming a distraction.” Trump said publicly shortly after that Gaetz was “doing very well” and suggested he has a bright future.

A source familiar told CNN earlier that lawmakers were honest with Gaetz about the challenges he faced to be confirmed in the Senate during private meetings on Wednesday. They told him they were not automatically going to vote yes just by virtue of Trump nominating him, the source said.

Mitch McConnell will chair the Senate Rules Committee next Congress

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell arrives for a news conference following the weekly Senate Republican policy luncheon at the US Capitol on November 19, in Washington, DC.

Outgoing Senate GOP Leader Mitch McConnell will chair the Senate Rules Committee next Congress, he said in a statement on Thursday.

In the announcement, McConnell noted that “defending the Senate as an institution and protecting the right to political speech in our elections remain among my longest-standing priorities.”

He also announced that he will chair the all-important Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Defense.

Since his decision to step down as leader, McConnell has emphasized that he wants to focus the rest of his time in office on beating back the isolationist strain in his party — and this will absolutely put him in the position to remain involved in that sphere.

Trump’s social media company is exploring a crypto payment service called TruthFi

Truth Social, the social media platform owned by President-elect Donald Trump, appears to be exploring a move into the crypto space.

Trump Media & Technology Group filed a trademark application earlier this week for TruthFi, which it described as a cryptocurrency payment processing platform.

The trademark application includes few specifics but lists numerous potential applications for TruthFi, including card payment processing services, asset management, custody service and trading in digital assets.

It’s not clear how far along Trump Media is in evaluating a crypto payment service or whether the Trump-owned public company will ultimately launch such a platform. A move into crypto could be a way to diversify beyond social media.

Trump Media did not respond to a request for comment.

The news comes just weeks after Trump’s election victory, a win powered in part by strong support from a crypto industry desperate for friendlier regulation from Washington.

Trump, who once bashed bitcoin but has since embraced it, promised during the campaign to make the United States the “crypto capital of the planet” and create a national cryptocurrency reserve.

Read more about TruthFi.

Senators were honest with Gaetz about how hard confirmation would be during private meetings, source says

As Donald Trump’s attorney general pick Matt Gaetz met with senators on Capitol Hill Wednesday, a source familiar told CNN that lawmakers didn’t shield him from the reality of what was to come in the confirmation process.

The lawmakers impressed upon Gaetz that being confirmed by the Senate would require a clear strategy and that GOP senators were not automatically going to vote yes just by virtue of Trump nominating him, the source said.

In one meeting, a source told CNN that a GOP senator wanted Gaetz to grapple with who on the committee he actually could convince to vote for him and what votes he thought he had actually secured. One by one, the senator wanted to know who had told Gaetz “yes” they were with him.

The gravity of a Senate confirmation process — which includes a full vetting by committee staff, a public hearing, dozens if not hundreds of written questions — was not something GOP senators wanted Gaetz to take lightly. Each step would be an important inflection point in his quest to be attorney general.

The source told CNN that it was made clear to Gaetz that he and his team would need to be strategic and articulate to members how they were going to go from where they were to getting confirmed.

House speaker says Gaetz has a "bright future"

House Speaker Mike Johnson praised Matt Gaetz and said he has a “bright future” after Gaetz announced he is withdrawing from the nomination to be attorney general.

Some background: Johnson said previously that he was “going to strongly request” that the House Ethics Committee which investigated Gaetz not issue its report. He said that it would be “a terrible precedent” because Gaetz already resigned from Congress after Trump picked him for attorney general.

Democrats are pressing for the disclosure of the report after the panel’s Republicans voted on Wednesday not to release the probe’s results. The committee investigated Gaetz over allegations of sexual misconduct and other alleged crimes. Recently, members of Gaetz’s orbit learned there might be witnesses who had been interviewed by the committee who had been previously unknown, one source familiar said, leading to the belief that more damning information could come out.

Tracking Trump's Cabinet picks: These roles are yet to be filled after Gaetz's withdrawal

President-elect Donald Trump is moving ahead with his presidential transition, selecting key loyalists for Cabinet roles and other top positions in his administration.

Former Florida Rep. Matt Gaetz said Thursday that he is withdrawing as Trump’s pick for attorney general, leaving the role open again for another pick. Trump does not have a new name in mind for attorney general and now returns to the drawing board, two people familiar with the matter tell CNN.

Cabinet members include the vice president and the heads of the 15 executive departments in the presidential line of succession. A president may also choose to elevate other roles to join the Cabinet. Trump’s Cabinet picks will need to be confirmed by the Senate.

Here are the Cabinet roles that the president-elect is yet to fill after Gaetz’s withdrawal:

  • Attorney general
  • Treasury secretary
  • Labor secretary
  • Housing and Urban Development secretary
  • Agriculture secretary

CNN is tracking Trump’s Cabinet picks here.

Vance says Gaetz made decision “entirely out of respect” for Trump administration

Vice President-elect JD Vance said Matt Gaetz made the decision to withdraw from consideration for attorney general “entirely out of respect” for the next Trump administration.

Vance spent yesterday on Capitol Hill meeting with Gaetz and Republican senators.

Gaetz is the 12th Cabinet secretary pick to withdraw in the past 30 years

Former Florida Rep. Matt Gaetz announced Thursday his withdrawal from consideration as President-elect Donald Trump’s pick for attorney general.

Gaetz’s decision comes a day after he met with GOP senators on Capitol Hill and as he faced scrutiny over sexual misconduct allegations. Republicans on the House Ethics Committee voted Wednesday not to release the results of their investigation into Gaetz. Sources tell CNN the committee was told of a second sexual encounter between Gaetz and a 17-year-old at a party in 2017.

Gaetz is not the first person to withdraw after being chosen for a Cabinet secretary position. His decision Thursday makes him the 12th Cabinet pick in the last 30 years to step down after being publicly announced.

House Ethics panel faces another curveball with Gaetz's withdrawal. Here's what may happen next with the report

Matt Gaetz threw another curve ball at the House Ethics Committee Thursday by announcing he is withdrawing from consideration as President-elect Donald Trump’s pick for attorney general.

The panel is expected to vote on the final report on December 5, after Republicans blocked to release the damaging findings on Wednesday. Democrats anticipate the panel’s findings on Gaetz are even less likely to emerge now that Gaetz has withdrawn from consideration to lead the Justice Department given Republicans were already reluctant to release the report.

House Ethics Committee Chairman Michael Guest has said part of the reason he has “reservations” about releasing his panel’s damaging report on Gaetz, is because it is not finished and is still in the “final review stages.”

Yet at one point during the panel’s closed-door meeting on Wednesday to discuss their investigation into Gaetz, a staff member said it would only take a couple of hours to finish it, two sources told CNN.

Democrats believe Republicans have been trying to delay the process amid public pressure from House Speaker Mike Johnson not to release the report and Trump’s direct push to confirm his cabinet picks. Johnson himself said Thursday that it was his understanding that the report was “an early draft, a rough draft” though he said he hasn’t spoken to Guest.

The investigation itself has been completed, the sources told CNN, and committee Republicans had already canceled a meeting to discuss the probe once prior to the Wednesday meeting.

But before that Dec. 5 private meeting, the full House is still expected to face a question about whether to force the release of the report — unless it gets pulled by leadership as a result of Gaetz taking himself out of the running.

GOP Sen. Hawley reacts to Gaetz’s withdrawal from attorney general: "I'm sure it was the right decision"

CNN

Republican Sen. Josh Hawley, who sits on the Senate Judiciary Committee, said he thinks it was “the right decision” for Matt Gaetz to withdraw as Donald Trump’s pick for attorney general if he and Trump felt it was.

Asked if there were signs of Gaetz’s resignation from their meeting on Capitol Hill yesterday, Hawley said, “Oh, no. I mean, he seemed very optimistic yesterday.”

“But listen, I think, I go back to the fact that this is the president’s Cabinet. He’s got to choose people who he has confidence in and who are going to be able to deliver on his agenda,” Hawley said.

On whether the nomination of Trump Cabinet pick Pete Hegseth, who was accused of sexual assault, faces jeopardy, Hawley encouraged letting the committee process play out.

“Obviously, Gaetz ultimately decided he didn’t want to go through the process. But if you have a nominee who wants to, I would say let him, let him testify and let’s not make judgments and reach conclusions until they’ve had a chance to testify and address this concern,” he said.

Asked by CNN who he would like to see as attorney general, Hawley said he would leave that to Trump.

Lawyer who represents 2 witnesses in House Ethics Committee probe reacts to Gaetz’s withdrawal

Joel Leppard, an attorney who represents two witnesses in the House Ethics Committee probe of Matt Gaetz, said that his clients are “relieved to have this chapter behind them” after the former Florida congressman’s withdrawal from attorney general consideration.

More background on the investigation: The woman who says she had sex when she was a minor with then-Rep. Matt Gaetz told the House Ethics Committee she had two sexual encounters with him at one party in 2017, sources familiar with her testimony tell CNN.

The woman, who was 17 years old at the time, testified that the second sexual encounter, which has not previously been reported, included another adult woman. She also testified to both sexual encounters in a civil deposition as part of a related lawsuit, sources said.

Republicans relieved as Gaetz news sinks in on Capitol Hill

As news of former Rep. Matt Gaetz’s decision to opt out of seeking the attorney general post spread to senators on Capitol Hill, many members — who knew that Gaetz would be difficult to confirm — were struck by a sense of relief.

“It was going to be very challenging. Very challenging. The most challenging of the nominees,” one Republican senator speaking on the condition of background to speak freely.

For the last week, lawmakers had been staring down what was going to be a rocky several months to even get to Gaetz’s confirmation hearing, which many expected would be peppered with more and more details about what witnesses told the House Ethics Committee behind closed doors.

There was pressure mounting to force a vote on the floor to release the report even if House ethics did not, something a handful of Republicans signaled they could be open to in the new year. Some Republicans such as Republican Sen. John Cornyn had also made crystal clear to Gaetz that the Senate Judiciary Committee’s vetting process would not be easy, telling reporters Wednesday that there would be no secrets.

“There is no way he was going to get confirmed. The transition team and he were well aware of that,” another GOP senator told CNN.

GOP Sen. Rick Scott says he is "disappointed" about Gaetz withdrawal for attorney general

Florida Republican Sen. Rick Scott said Thursday that he was “disappointed” that former Florida Rep. Matt Gaetz has withdrawn his nomination for attorney general.

While he didn’t offer names of people who he believes should be nominated as attorney general, Scott said the person who ultimately gets the job needs to create trust in the federal government.

“The American public has completely lost trust of the federal government, and so we’re going to have to have somebody in there that goes and creates trust,” Scott said.

Gaetz, who resigned from Congress shortly after being named Trump’s pick for the top post, is accused of having sex with a minor in 2017 and was the subject of a House ethics investigation.