Todd Blanche grilled about Epstein, Trump and 'anti-weaponisation fund ' at AG confirmation hearingpublished at 19:43 BST
Image source, Getty ImagesActing US Attorney General Todd Blanche has appeared for his first day of confirmation hearings before the US Senate, as he seeks a permanent appointment to lead America's top law enforcement agency.
Blanche, who took over after Trump fired Pam Bondi, faced probing questions, mostly from Democrats. Republicans praised his handling of immigration cases and called for him to look into allegations against former special counsel Jack Smith and taking a more aggressive stance against medication abortion.
Here are today's main areas of questions:
- Epstein files. Blanched was asked about what senators called "problematic redactions"; "insufficient effort" on following investigative leads" and "refusal to meet with victims" when it came to the handling of the federal investigation into deceased sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. Blanche said releasing millions of files within a short time-frame was a "Herculean task" and that it is against the law for him to meet with victims directly
- Independence from Trump. Blanche, who was previously Trump's personal lawyer, says he is not friends with the president and would be able to operate independently of him if confirmed. "I met him as his criminal defence attorney," he said. "I'm not sure there's very many people who have ever had a criminal defence attorney who calls that person their friend."
- Anti-weaponisation fund. Senators probed Blanche about the administration's quashed federal fund for people who believed they were unfairly targeted by the government. Blanche, who signed the agreement with Trump to create the fund in exchange for the president dropping his personal lawsuit against the IRS, said the fund is "dead" and won't move forward
- A Trump third term. Blanche affirmed the president is not eligible to run again
We're ending our live coverage on this page shortly. You can stay up-to-date on this story here: Epstein 'mistakes' and Trump ties: Key takeaways from Todd Blanche's confirmation hearing











