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Thursday, June 4, 2026

TRUMP'S ROY COHN 2.0: WILL THE SENATE CROWN TODD BLANCHE — OR JUST LET HIM REIGN ANYWAY?

 

TRUMP'S ROY COHN 2.0: WILL THE SENATE CROWN TODD BLANCHE — OR JUST LET HIM REIGN ANYWAY?

A deadly serious look at the man running America's top law enforcement agency — and the ghost of a disbarred fixer haunting every decision he makes.

A Tale of Two Fixers: Meet the Men

To understand why legal scholars keep invoking Roy Cohn's name every time Todd Blanche steps to a podium, you need to understand that history doesn't always repeat itself — sometimes it just gets a better wardrobe and a corner office.

Roy Cohn (1927–1986) was the original scorched-earth legal warrior. At just 24, he helped send Julius and Ethel Rosenberg to the electric chair. He then became Senator Joe McCarthy's chief attack dog during the Red Scare, personally ruining thousands of careers with gleeful efficiency. After Washington spat him out, he reinvented himself as New York's most feared private fixer — representing mob bosses, media moguls, and a brash young real estate developer named Donald Trump. His philosophy, hammered into Trump's psyche like a golden nail: never settle, never apologize, always attack, and for heaven's sake, countersue for $100 million. He died in 1986 — disbarred, broke, and in denial about his AIDS diagnosis — but not before leaving a permanent fingerprint on American political culture.

Todd Blanche is, on the surface, Cohn's polar opposite. He is measured where Cohn was theatrical. He speaks in the clipped, precise cadences of a former Southern District of New York (SDNY) federal prosecutor, not the tabloid-friendly snarl of a New York power broker. He wore the establishment's finest suits — WilmerHale, then Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft — before burning them on the altar of Trump loyalty in 2023.

Yet here they stand, separated by four decades, united by one man's absolute need for a legal shield who asks no inconvenient questions.

How Blanche Earned His Stripes (And Trump's Undying Affection)

The transformation of Todd Blanche from elite corporate lawyer to Trump's most valuable legal asset is a masterclass in strategic loyalty — and calculated professional risk.

It began quietly. Blanche represented Paul Manafort on New York state charges and got the case thrown out on double-jeopardy grounds — a stunning win that made Trump take notice. He then defended Boris Epshteyn and Igor Fruman, slowly embedding himself in Trump World's legal apparatus.

Then came April 2023 and the Manhattan indictment. Blanche's law firm, Cadwalader, gave him an ultimatum: Trump or us. Without blinking, Blanche resigned his partnership, launched "Blanche Law," and tethered his entire professional future to a man facing 91 felony counts across four jurisdictions. That is either extraordinary courage or extraordinary calculation — possibly both.

He then managed the defense across three of Trump's four criminal cases: the hush-money trial, the classified documents case, and the federal election obstruction case. Trump was convicted on 34 felony counts in New York — a fact Blanche's critics enjoy mentioning — but Trump valued something more than acquittal: absolute loyalty and unshakeable public composure. When the federal cases collapsed after Trump's 2024 election victory, Blanche was canonized.

The reward came swiftly. Trump installed him first as Deputy Attorney General, then — after firing Pam Bondi — as Acting Attorney General. Trump has now formally announced his nomination as permanent AG, calling him talented and praising his work at DOJ.

The Cohn-Blanche Comparison: A Side-by-Side

The parallel is real, but the execution is what makes Blanche arguably more formidable than his predecessor in Trump's affections.

DimensionRoy CohnTodd Blanche
Legal StyleTheatrical, chaotic, tabloid-drivenMeasured, institutional, prosecutorial
Power BasePrivate fixer, outsider, backroom dealsActing AG — runs the DOJ from the top
Trump RolePersonal mentor & street-fighting lawyerPersonal defense attorney turned chief law enforcer
Relationship to RulesBroke them openly; disbarred for itBends them quietly through policy and constitutional framing
Public PersonaLoved being the villain; leaked to gossip columnsCorporate professional; speaks in legalese
Ultimate FateDisbarred, died brokeCurrently nominated as the nation's top cop

The core similarity is what keeps analysts up at night: both men fundamentally redefined their role as personal protectors of Donald Trump rather than independent officers of the law or the Constitution. Cohn did it from a private office on East 68th Street. Blanche does it from the fifth floor of the Robert F. Kennedy Building.

What Has Blanche Actually Done as Acting AG?

Since taking over the DOJ, Blanche has wasted precisely zero time translating personal loyalty into institutional policy. The highlights — or lowlights, depending on your political zip code — are striking.

The $1.776 Billion "Persecution Fund": Blanche spearheaded a massive compensation initiative for Trump allies who claimed they were victims of political persecution by the previous administration. It was eventually abandoned after judicial and political pushback — but the audacity of the number ($1.776 billion — the year of the Declaration of Independence, naturally) suggests someone with a flair for symbolic messaging.

Targeting Former Investigators: He appointed Reagan-era prosecutor Joseph diGenova to lead a sweeping federal probe into whether past intelligence and law enforcement officials conspired to undermine Trump — essentially weaponizing the DOJ against the people who once weaponized it (allegedly) against Trump.

IRS Immunity: He defended controversial measures granting effective immunity to Trump, his family, and his businesses from IRS investigations — a move that drew sharp letters from House Judiciary Democrats accusing him of "improperly showering government cash on Trump's political operatives."

Rejecting Oversight: He has stonewalled congressional oversight requests on multiple fronts, defending the restructuring of federal investigations with the calm confidence of a man who knows exactly how much institutional power he holds.

Will the Senate Confirm Him? And Does It Even Matter?

Here is where the story takes a deliciously ironic twist — because the Senate may be almost irrelevant to the outcome.

Trump formally announced Blanche's nomination for permanent Attorney General on June 4, 2026. The Senate math is familiar: Republicans hold the majority, and Blanche was already confirmed as Deputy AG by a 52-46 party-line vote in March 2025. That precedent suggests a confirmation is likely — but not guaranteed, given the increasingly vocal unease among a small handful of Republican senators about DOJ independence.

But here's the punchline that Roy Cohn would have loved: Blanche may not need confirmation at all.

Legal analysts have noted that under the Federal Vacancies Reform Act and existing DOJ succession rules, Blanche could potentially continue serving as Acting Attorney General for the remainder of Trump's term — through January 2029 — even if the Senate never holds a vote. The Senate's advice-and-consent power, that grand constitutional check on executive overreach, may amount to little more than a strongly worded suggestion.

As Politico noted, "The acting attorney general could continue running DOJ for much of the year even without Trump's nomination" — and Punchbowl News went further, reporting Blanche may be able to serve indefinitely without confirmation.

Roy Cohn, the man who spent his career finding the loophole in every rule, would raise a glass.

The Verdict: Same Mission, Deadlier Execution

The Cohn-Blanche comparison is more than a clever historical footnote — it is a genuine structural warning about the relationship between personal loyalty and institutional power.

Cohn was dangerous because he was outside the system, throwing wrenches into it with gleeful abandon. Blanche is dangerous — to his critics — for precisely the opposite reason: he is inside the system, running it with the methodical precision of a seasoned federal prosecutor who knows exactly where every lever is.

Roy Cohn never ran the Department of Justice. He never had to. He had a phone, a Rolodex, and a client who listened. Todd Blanche has 115,000 federal employees, the full investigative apparatus of the FBI, and a president who still listens.

The ghost of Roy Cohn didn't just find a successor. He found an upgrade.


Sources: NPR (June 4, 2026) | BBC News | House Judiciary Democrats Letter to Blanche, May 12, 2026 | The Hill / Congress.gov Nomination Record



Sources & References

🔵 Todd Blanche — Nomination & Attorney General Role

1. BBC News — "Trump to nominate Blanche for attorney general" 🔗 https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c4g8nyzl2pno Published: June 4, 2026 — Confirms Trump's formal announcement of Blanche's permanent AG nomination.

2. The Washington Post — "Trump says he plans to nominate Todd Blanche to serve as attorney general" 🔗 https://www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/2026/06/04/trump-says-he-plans-nominate-todd-blanche-serve-attorney-general/ Published: June 4, 2026 — Covers the nomination announcement and expected Senate confirmation battle.

3. Politico — "Trump expected to nominate Todd Blanche to be attorney general" 🔗 https://www.politico.com/news/2026/06/03/trump-todd-blanche-attorney-general-00949678 Published: June 3, 2026 — Details Blanche's acting role since April and the path to permanent nomination.

4. The Guardian — "Trump suggests he will make Todd Blanche permanent attorney general" 🔗 https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/jun/03/trump-todd-blanche-attorney-general Published: June 3, 2026 — International perspective on Blanche's elevation and DOJ implications.


🔵 Todd Blanche — DOJ Policies & Congressional Oversight

5. PBS NewsHour — "Blanche testifies that Trump administration is dropping 'anti-weaponization fund'" 🔗 https://www.pbs.org/newshour/politics/watch-live-blanche-testifies-in-house-hearing-as-trump-considers-dropping-anti-weaponization-fund Published: June 2, 2026 — Covers the collapse of the $1.776 billion compensation fund and Blanche's House testimony.

6. C-SPAN — "Acting Attorney General Blanche Testifies on Oversight of Justice Dept." 🔗 https://www.c-span.org/event/house-committee/acting-attorney-general-blanche-testifies-on-oversight-of-justice-dept/443671 Full video record of Blanche's congressional testimony on DOJ oversight and restructuring.

7. Wikipedia — "Todd Blanche" (Biography & Career Timeline) 🔗 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Todd_Blanche Comprehensive career overview from SDNY prosecutor through Acting AG, including Pam Bondi succession.


🔵 Roy Cohn — History, Biography & Trump Connection

8. Britannica"Roy Cohn | Joseph McCarthy, Donald Trump, Second Red Scare" 🔗 https://www.britannica.com/biography/Roy-Cohn Authoritative biographical overview of Cohn's career from the Rosenberg trial through his role as Trump's mentor.

9. BBC Culture — "Roy Cohn: The mysterious US lawyer who helped Donald Trump rise to power" 🔗 https://www.bbc.com/culture/article/20240517-roy-cohn-the-mysterious-us-lawyer-who-helped-donald-trump-rise-to-power Published: May 2024 — Deep-dive into the Cohn-Trump relationship and its lasting influence on Trump's legal philosophy.

10. Biography.com — "'The Apprentice' Movie: How Roy Cohn Influenced Donald Trump" 🔗 https://www.biography.com/legal-figures/a60776177/roy-cohn-donald-trump-friendship Covers the personal and professional bond between Cohn and Trump, including the "never settle" doctrine.

11. Wikipedia — "Roy Cohn" (Full Biography) 🔗 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roy_Cohn Comprehensive entry covering McCarthyism, mob clients, Trump mentorship, disbarment, and death.