Monday, May 18, 2026

Todd Blanche tells Fox News Sunday the 2020 election was rigged to defeat Donald Trump -- even though Trump himself has admitted he lost to Joe Biden

(Purple Room Politics, Facebook)


Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche said during an interview on Fox News Sunday the 2020 election was rigged in order to defeat Donald Trump. Blanche, however, promptly started backpedaling on his claim, which might be a good idea considering Trump himself has admitted multiple times that he lost the election to Joe Biden. In fact, we published an article roughly two weeks ago about Trump's admission that he knew he had lost in 2020.

A jointly published article at The Independent and Yahoo! News indicates Blanche did not get that memo. Under the headline "Trump AG Todd Blanche says he can't give 'definitive answer' as to whether the 2020 election was stolen." Josh Marcus writes:

There’s a “ton of evidence” the 2020 presidential election was rigged against President Donald Trump, Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche said on Sunday, though he soon conceded he couldn’t provide a “definitive answer” if that was actually true or when federal officials would prove it.

“I’m not promising there’s going to be a definitive answer,” Blanche told Sunday Morning Futures on Fox News. “That wouldn’t be fair to you or anybody else, but we are looking at it, and we’re hoping to get one.”

It sounds like Blanche has decided to talk tough about the 2020 election, even though he seems to know he has little, if anything, to back it up. That is a slightly different game from the one Trump is playing: Trying to convince voters, especially any MAGAs who might still be taking him seriously, that an election was stolen from him though he has admitted he lost it. Our conclusion? In slightly different ways, both Blanche and Trump are playing sections of the American electorate for fools. Here is more from Josh Marcus:

Speaking with host Maria Bartiromo, Blanche (who is Trump’s former criminal defense attorney) pointed to the Trump administration’s ongoing investigations in Georgia and Florida but said it was unclear what those probes would yield.

“It takes a lot of work to uncover what happened in 2020,” he said. “It takes a lot of, good-old-fashioned law enforcement, police work, which is what we’re doing, and we have great prosecutors working on it as well, and I assure the American people that as soon as we have something to say for it — whether it’s charges, whether it’s a report, whether it’s the results of an investigation — the American people will learn about what we uncovered.”

What kind of tab will Blanche and his team run up for taxpayers to pay -- on what he seems to admit would have to improve to qualify as a wild goose chase? Blanche doesn't go into that. The Independent explains why, in succinct terms:

To date, no credible evidence has been discovered that proves the 2020 election was rigged and Trump was the rightful winner.

The Trump campaign and its allies repeatedly challenged the results in states he lost to Joe Biden in the aftermath of the 2020 election court, and subsequent court cases, recounts, committee probes, and press investigations have not yielded any proof of the president’s ongoing claims that he won the contest.

Nonetheless, top officials across the administration have echoed the president’s conspiracy theories about the election, and Trump loyalists are driving multiple highly unusual investigations across the country looking for proof six years later that the election was indeed stolen from him.

Are members of the Trump regime convinced that MAGAs are such saps they will believe anything that supports their pre-conceived notion that Dear Leader cannot possibly lose an honest election? Are Trumpers setting the stage for allegations that Democrats used fraud to steal the 2026 and/or 2028 elections? Here is Josh Marcus' roundup of investigative activity driven by the Republican conspiracy train:

In Florida, former Trump lawyer Joseph diGenova has been selected to lead a sprawling federal investigation about the president’s rivals, reportedly premised on the idea that various actions since 2016 constitute a “grand conspiracy” among Democratic officials to keep Republicans out of power.

This, of course, is laughable. Are we to believe Democrats are so bad at executing their grand conspiracy that it has resulted in a Republican takeover of the executive branch, both houses of the legislative branch, with a judicial branch dominated by a conservative majority on the U.S. Supreme Court? Are Democrats such inept cheaters that their underhandedness has resulted in the GOP controlling every corner of government? That apparently is what Trumpers want their followers to believe? And we've only scratched the surface of the GOP-fueled investigative frenzy, Marcus reports:

The Trump FBI has seized election records in Arizona.

Earlier this year in Georgia, meanwhile, the FBI raided an elections office in the closely fought 2020 battleground state, based on a referral from election denier Kurt Olsen, who worked closely with Trump’s campaign in 2020 to challenge election results as part of a “Stop the Steal” movement.

The warrant that prompted the search itself provided no additional evidence to support a claim of fraud, and it even noted that “many allegations” have already been “disproven.”

“After more than five years, dozens of court cases, and over a year in total control of the federal government, this is all they’ve got?” elections law expert David Becker, director of the Center for Election Innovation & Research, told The Independent at the time of the raid.

They don't have much of anything, and it's nuttier when you understand that the man at the center of it all, Trump himself, has admitted over and over that he lost the 2020 election. Consider this from our post dated May 5, 2025, in which we noted that Trump used the occasion of Rudy Guiliani's hospitalization in an attempt to reignite claims he was cheated in the 2020 election . . . . 

"Our fabulous Rudy Giuliani, a True Warrior, and the Best Mayor in the History of New York City, BY FAR, has been hospitalized, and is in critical condition," Trump wrote in the post. "What a tragedy that he was treated so badly by the Radical Left Lunatics, Democrats ALL — AND HE WAS RIGHT ABOUT EVERYTHING! They cheated on the Elections, fabricated hundreds of stories, did anything possible to destroy our Nation, and now, look at Rudy. So sad!" 

. . . What about the section I highlighted above as being of particular importance? In it, Trump is claiming Democrats "cheated on the Elections," an apparent reference to the 2020 presidential election that Trump lost to Joe Biden. Here is the key point: Trump now claims, and has been claiming for some time, that he was cheated in that election -- even though he already has admitted that he lost. Here are several examples where Trump said he knew he lost, usually using the term "by a whisker":

* NBC News: Trump admits in podcast appearance that he did not win the election against Joe Biden;

* The Guardian: Trump privately admitted to aides he lost the election, top aides testify;

* Common Cause: Eight times Trump knew he lost

* Mother Jones: Trump finally is admitting he lost the 2020 election.

After all of these times admitting that he lost in 2020, why did Trump use the occasion of Rudy Giuliani's hospitalization to change course and claim Democrats won by cheating -- which in his own words, he knows is not true? 

Is Trump counting on voters to forget, or ignore, all the times he admitted that he lost in 2020? That's the only reason I can come up with that Trump would be trying such a charade six years later.

Friday, May 15, 2026

Robert Reich: Trump says the CEOs on his China trip are "incredible," but reality tells a different story: Like Trump, they are out for themselves, not America

Elon Musk at China Summit (New York Times)


The billionaire CEOs who accompanied Donald Trump to China share a characteristic that might not show up in mainstream news coverage of the Beijing Summit: They seek to maximize their company profits (and their own executive pay), but they do not necessarily show loyalty to the United States. In that sense, says former U.S. Labor Secretary Robert Reich, they are much like Trump himself. Under the headline "The most important thing you should know about the CEOs traveling to China with Trump; they all have something in common, and it's not the interests of America," Reich writes:

Trump calls the entourage of 12 CEOs accompanying him to China an “incredible gathering” of America’s “Greatest Businessmen/women.”

Well, it may be an incredible gathering. But to characterize them as America’s greatest business leaders — who are assumed to be leading America’s competitive charge against China — is misleading.

The American CEOs traveling with Trump to China don’t think of themselves as being in competition with China. In fact, they’d like nothing better than to make more money for themselves and their shareholders by setting up more lower-cost, highly productive factories and research facilities in China and hiring more Chinese talent.

It’s an important distinction. The CEOs of Chinese companies are in business not only to make money but also to strengthen China’s geopolitical power in the world. The CEOs of American companies want to make gobs of money, of course, but they couldn’t give a rat’s ass about strengthening America’s geopolitical power in the world.

This basic difference is airbrushed away in breathless media stories about the competitive race between the American and Chinese economies — the so-called “race for supremacy” in AI, advanced semiconductors, supercomputers, solar wafers, biotechnology, and other industries of the future.

The distinction never appears in the breezy press coverage of Trump’s trip to China, along with his “U.S. corporate” delegation.

Reich places the distinction front and center, starting with the wealthiest person on the planet. Reich writes:

Take Elon Musk, obviously a conspicuous presence in Trump’s CEO delegation. Musk’s Tesla Gigafactory Shanghai produces over a third of Tesla’s global car sales. It’s also Tesla’s most productive factory. In February 2025, Musk opened a second factory in Shanghai, a $200-million plant focused on producing Megapack batteries. Nearly 40 percent of Tesla’s entire battery supply chain relies on Chinese companies.

All good for Musk and for Tesla shareholders, but what about American workers, who aren’t getting this work? What about America’s national security, which could be compromised if China gains further global dominance over batteries (as well as other renewables)? Do you think Musk cares? 

Next up is Apple CEO Tim Cook, an Alabama native and graduate of Auburn University. Apple long has been one of America's most successful and innovative companies, with Cook one of its most admired leaders. Surely he has the USA's best interests at heart. No so fast, Reich writes:

Consider Apple’s Tim Cook, also in Trump’s CEO delegation. China has become the gravitational core of Apple’s supply chain. Indeed, much of Apple’s success is due to Cook’s move to consolidate virtually all of his company’s manufacturing in China. About 90 percent of iPhones are assembled there, backed by massive investments in local supplier expertise and infrastructure. Cook explains that he’s taking advantage of China’s “unmatched” expertise in advanced tooling and manufacturing.

Since 2008, Apple has worked with Chinese suppliers to train 30 million workers there and has transferred practical engineering knowledge of how to make complex things from American engineers to thousands of Chinese engineers in hundreds of Chinese factories and research centers. Apple’s Cupertino, California, headquarters has sent so many American engineers to China to teach Chinese engineers that it even persuaded United Airlines to schedule three weekly flights from San Francisco to Chengdu and Hangzhou.

What about the banking industry? Does one of its most prominent CEOs place loyalty to the U.S. at a premium? Not necessarily, Reich reports:

A third CEO in Trump’s delegation is Jane Fraser, CEO of Citigroup. Her goal has been to expand the bank’s (and its clients’) investments in China by growing Citigroup’s team in China and capturing market share for the corporation in high technology and advanced manufacturing.

Fraser’s moves may be good for Citigroup’s bottom line, but they may not be good for America. As she connects international investors with opportunities within China, she may be siphoning off potential investments in high technology and advanced manufacturing in the United States.

Gee, that doesn't sound like an "America First" approach. Wasn't that supposed to be one of the Trump administration's top priorities? It looks like that memo did not reach the banking sector. With that, we turn to the technology industry. Any chance they are loyal to their "hometown team"? Reich doesn't seem to think so:

Another American CEO in Trump’s delegation is Jensen Huang, CEO of Nvidia. Huang’s goal is to get China to buy Nvidia’s AI and its advanced H200 processors, even at the risk that Chinese computer scientists and engineers might reverse-engineer them, as they have so many other technologies America once dominated.

Huang argues that with roughly half of all the world’s AI researchers, China is strategically vital for American tech companies. Huang may be right, but what’s strategically vital for American AI companies may not be in the strategic interest of the United States. The capacities that increase these corporations’ profits and returns to their American investors (including the pay packages of their CEOs) do not necessarily increase the productivity, knowledge, or strategic strength of America’s AI.

What are we, and Reich, left to think? Is Trump blind to the way his "incredible" CEOs operate in the real world? Does Trump care that the CEO's philosophies and his own policies undercut U.S. workers on the global stage. Is the China trip an elaborate con, designed to paint a picture of American dominance, while inflation, driven by Trump's war in Iran, eats away at paychecks in the U.S. Gosh, Donald Trump, Elon Musk & Co. wouldn't do that to us, would they? Let's see what Robert Reich thinks:

Doesn’t Trump know this? Does he assume that the rest of us don’t know? Is he really ignorant of the fact that Chinese corporations are tethered to China, but the CEOs of Tesla, Apple, Nvidia, and other so-called “American” corporations are not strategically bound to America? American CEOs aren’t paid to worry about the competitiveness of the United States, nor the number of good jobs in America, nor even about American national security.

Maybe Trump knows all this but doesn’t care. When it comes to making big money doing global deals, Trump’s merry band of CEOs has about as much loyalty to the United States as does Trump himself.

Thursday, May 14, 2026

Heather Cox Richardson: Trump's latest binge-posting spree indicates he is mentally unwell, claiming perceived enemies are traitors and calling for arrests




After reading multiple reports about Donald Trump's latest binge posting spree on Truth Social, which apparently was extraordinary even by his lofty standards, I decided to conduct a research study, funded by a grant from the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH), which is part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), based in Bethesda, Maryland. (Researcher's Note 1: I made up the part about my study being funded by a grant from NIMH. I added that because I thought it might be fun, should Trump and Elon Musk come across this post, to imagine they might think -- if even for a nanosecond -- that I received federal dollars for research on Trump's declining mental health. After all, NIMH and its parent institute (NIH) were prime targets of the attack by Trump and Musk (via DOGE) on scientific research -- along with similar entities, such as the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the National Science Foundation (NSF), and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA).

My research consisted of randomized trials centered on three Google searches of phrases connected to Donald Trump's mental health: (1) "Donald Trump and rants"; (2) "Donald Trump and meltdowns"; (3) "Donald Trump and melt downs." Item No. 3 was needed because our preliminary investigation determined that some people use the spelling "meltdowns" (one word), while many more people use the spelling "melt downs" (two words) (who knew?)

I used advanced computational methods -- also known as the calculator app on my laptop -- to produce final results that are ready for presentation to an external review committee. The results are as follows:

* Search No. 1 ("Donald Trump and rants") produced 42,400,000 results;

* Search No. 2 ("Donald Trump and meltdowns") produced 9,680,000 results;

* Search No. 3 ("Donald Trump and melt downs") produced 62,700,000 results

When Search Nos. 2 and 3 are combined, the total is 72,380,000  results. When Search No. 1 is added the total becomes 114,780,000.

Research Summary: This study supports our hypothesis that massive numbers of people on "this particular planet" are freaking out about the shaky status of Donald Trump's mental health. I further hypothesize that longitudinal studies will reveal particularly high numbers of freak-outs in the following countries: Venezuela, Colombia, Brazil, Greenland, Denmark, Mexico, Canada, Cuba, Nigeria, Yemen, Syria, Somalia, Panama, Iraq, and the Gaza Strip -- all countries that Trump has attacked or threatened during his second term. The United States is expected to be the No. 1 producer of Trump-related freak-outs -- especially in Maine, where some Democrats and Independents seem convinced, as if by magical thinking, that an oyster shucker with a Nazi tattoo can function effectively as a U.S. senator.

Researcher's Note 2: I'm heartened to know that I'm not the only academician concerned about Donald Trump's mental health. Heather Cox Richardson, a professor of history at Boston College, seems to be thinking along the same lines. Thanks to her wildly popular "Letters from an American" Substack page, which has 2.5 to 3 million subscribers (making her the No. 1 creator on Substack), Cox Richardson might be the most influential and widely read historian in . . . well, American history. Heck, I know people who couldn't stay awake in high school history class and now read Cox Richardson religiously. In a country that is going backwards on many fronts, I would call that progress.

In a post dated May 12, 2023, and published yesterday, Cox Richardson writes on her concerns about Trump's mental health. If she and I are thinking along the same lines, I will consider myself in fine company indeed. It turns out that Cox's concerns for our country go beyond Trump's mental health, and we will examine those in a moment. But let's start at the top, where Cox Richardson writes:

The biggest story in the country, today and always, is that the president of the United States is mentally unwell.

Over the course of three hours last night, he posted on social media 55 times. Those posts accused a number of those Trump considers his personal enemies, including former president Barack Obama, of treason; claimed that investigations of the ties between his 2016 campaign and Russian operatives were an attempt to damage Trump; insisted the 2020 presidential election was stolen; reposted a fake quotation from Senator John Kennedy (R-LA) accusing Obama of making a personal fortune of $120 million from the Affordable Care Act, also known as Obamacare; labeled Obama and others “traitors” and called for their arrest; and demanded to know why acting attorney general Todd Blanche hadn’t indicted any of those people yet.

This morning, he started in again with a long screed attacking the New York Times for its coverage of his alterations to the reflecting pool in front of the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C., and insisting that Democratic presidents Obama and Joe Biden had “botched” renovations that he was now fixing for “a ‘tiny’ fraction of the cost!” He posted an AI image of Obama, Biden, and former House speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) apparently swimming in a filthy version of the reflecting pool with the caption: “Dumacrats Love Sewage.” Then he posted an image of himself on the $100 bill. And then he was back to calling House minority leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY) “Low IQ.”

After posting a number of AI images showing the U.S. military destroying the Iranian military, Trump posted: “When the Fake News says that the Iranian enemy is doing well, Militarily, against us, it’s virtual TREASON in that it is such a false, and even preposterous, statement. They are aiding and abetting the enemy!”

Then he posted an image of a map with Venezuela overlaid with the U.S. flag. The caption read: “51st State.”

Trump seems to be comforting himself by lashing out at his perceived enemies and insisting he is competent and popular. Before he left for China today, he claimed: “We have Iran very much under control. We’re either going to make a deal or they’re going to be decimated. One way or the other, we win.”

Mosheh Gains, Courtney Kube, and Monica Alba of NBC News reported today that if Trump decides to restart major combat operations against Iran, military leaders are considering renaming the operations with a new name, like “Operation Sledgehammer,” to suggest those operations would be different than the current “Epic Fury.” They argue that renaming the military operation would restart the clock of the 1973 War Powers Act that requires congressional authorization to continue it after sixty days, a deadline that ran out on May 1.

War Powers Act expert Brian Finucane, who was a lawyer for the State Department, commented: “Nope. Changing the name of the authorized war with Iran does not alter the application of the War Powers Resolution’s 60-day clock.”

In the meantime, there is no apparent movement toward opening the Strait of Hormuz, even as numbers released today by the Department of Labor show that inflation in April hit its highest level since 2023. Trump’s own intelligence agencies assessed earlier this year that Iran was not building a nuclear weapon and that Iran’s leader had not reauthorized the nuclear weapons program he suspended in 2003. An assessment from the Defense Intelligence Agency said that Iran would not be able to reach the U.S. with an intercontinental ballistic missile until 2035.

Nonetheless, the administration and its supporters appear to have settled on the idea that the cost of the war has been worthwhile because the U.S. was under imminent threat of nuclear attack by Iran. When a reporter asked Trump today, before he left for China, to what extent Americans’ financial situation is motivating him to make a deal with Iran, he answered:

“Not even a little bit. The only thing that matters when I’m talking about Iran—they can’t have a nuclear weapon. I don’t think about Americans’ financial situation. I don’t think about anybody. I think about one thing—we cannot let Iran have a nuclear weapon. That’s all.”

A CNN/SSRS poll released today shows that 70% of Americans disapprove of the way Trump is handling the economy.

Trump is, however, thinking about his own financial situation. Tonight Andrew Duehren and Alan Feuer of the New York Times reported that the Department of Justice is in talks to settle Trump’s $10 billion lawsuit against the Internal Revenue Service for damages after a contractor during Trump’s first term leaked tax information, including his, to the media.

The judge in the case has ordered Trump’s lawyers and the Department of Justice to file briefs by May 20 explaining why this is a true case in which the two sides are opposed when Trump both is the plaintiff and runs the agency that is the defendant. If they settle before then, the judge will not be able to say much about whether the case was valid in the first place.

Duehren and Feuer note that the Department of Justice has fought similar cases brought because of the leak, arguing that the government can’t be held liable for something a contractor does. The government settled a case with hedge fund billionaire Ken Griffin in 2024 by making a public apology.

The New York Times journalists report that one of the options for settling with Trump would be for the IRS to drop any audits of Trump, his family members, or his businesses. Since 1977, IRS policy has been to conduct a mandatory audit of the sitting president every year, although it failed to audit Trump’s taxes for his first two years in office during his first term. Clearly, he would like for it to fail to audit his taxes this time around as well.

Let's turn to Cox Richardson's concerns that go beyond Trump's mental health. I will highlight in yellow the first sentence or two of the new sections:

The special treatment certain people enjoy in the U.S. that enables them to get around accountability was in the news earlier today, too, as the victims of sex offender Jeffrey Epstein testified before a panel made up of the Democrats on the House Oversight and Reform Committee. The top Democrat on the committee, Robert Garcia of California, began the day by introducing a new report called “The Price of Non-Prosecution.” It explained that the sweetheart deal U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Florida Alexander Acosta—later Trump’s secretary of labor—negotiated with Epstein to protect him from federal prosecution left him able to continue his sex-trafficking operation and to expand it.

The survivors recounted their anger and frustration when they discovered the federal government had made a secret deal with Epstein. One survivor, who identified herself as Roza, detailed how Epstein sexually assaulted her over three years when he was supposed to be serving a jail sentence. She broke down as she recounted how the Department of Justice under then–attorney general Pam Bondi continued that favoritism, exposing her name publicly while leaving the names of the perpetrators’ names redacted.

“I stepped forward along other survivors hoping those who allowed this to happen will be held accountable. I kept my identity protected as ‘Jane Doe.’ I woke up one day with my name mentioned over 500 times. While the rich and powerful remain protected by redaction, my name was exposed to the world. Now reporters from across the globe contact me. I cannot live without looking over my shoulder. I can only imagine the long-term impact this ‘mistake’ will have on my life.”

In Tennessee today, Tennessee House speaker Cameron Sexton removed all the House Democrats from standing committees, saying they had behaved in a way “aimed at disrupting the democratic and legislative processes” as they protested the mid-decade redistricting that broke up Tennessee’s only majority-Black, Democratic district. As Tennessee state representative Justin J. Pearson notes, this decree removed “every Black elected official in the state legislature from any committee we served on” and stripped “nearly 2 million Tennesseans from the representation they deserve” in the Tennessee state legislature.

“We will not stop fighting,” state representative Justin Jones posted. “We will not stop getting in good trouble. We will not go back!”

Wednesday, May 13, 2026

Donald Trump's strange claim that Todd Blanche "kept me out of jail for years" seems to be a subconscious reaction to unyielding stress created by Epstein files


Just when you think Donald Trump has said all the nutty things he can say, along comes a moment like the one Monday where Trump praised Todd Blanche for keeping him out of jail for years. What were the circumstances involved and the exact words spoken? For that, we turn to this report from Mediaite:

President Donald Trump praised acting Attorney General Todd Blanche on Monday, saying the lawyer has “kept me out of jail for years.”

What was the sound you might have heard when Trump uttered those words? It was thousands (millions?) of casual listeners spewing liquids out of their mouths, in a reflexive response to the words that had just hit their ears. What did Trump mean, if anything, by his latest mangled attempt at speaking English? We will address that question in a moment. But first, here are more details from Mediaite

Trump nominated Blanche as deputy attorney general before elevating him to acting attorney general after Trump fired Pam Bondi last month. Previously, Blanche served as Trump’s personal attorney during the New York hush money trial in which Trump was convicted in May 2024 on 34 counts of falsifying records to conceal hush money payments to cover up his affair with pornographic actress Stormy Daniels. In January 2025, then-President-Elect Trump was given a sentence of unconditional discharge with no jail time and no fine.

On Monday, the president hosted an event celebrating law enforcement and praised various members of his administration. Trump had some especially colorful remarks when he got around to Blanche . . . 

We have a man who’s doing a great job, I’ll tell you. I knew it, because he kept me out of jail for years. Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche. He kept me out of jail. They would indict me left and right, the crooked Democrats. You know, it’s amazing. They impeach me. They indict me. Then, when I get in office, if I say something like, “Well, maybe that should be looked into.” ‘Weaponization!”

I go through court cases. I win them because they were fake indictments. But when I even mention like, I said the other day that some of the stuff should be looked into. They said, “Weaponization! He’s a terrible human being. Weaponization”… They blame me for weaponization. They are a crooked bunch and we want to keep it the way it is, what we have now. We have great law enforcement now. We have law enforcement that loves our country, not law enforcement that’s sick and dangerous.

What's going on here? Two things jump out at me: (1) Trump is lying when he says he wins court cases. He certainly did not win the Stormy Daniels hush-money case or the E. Jean Carroll civil case involving allegations of rape and defamation, and those are just the two best-known recent cases with which he has been involved; (2) Trump is projecting "weaponization" on his enemies, when no president in history has weaponized "sick and dangerous law enforcement" the way he has -- with his ICE thugs fatally shooting Minneapolis residents Alex Pretti and Renee Good.

History tells us that Trump lies and projects the way most of us breathe. When he is using those familiar rhetorical devices, it tells me at least some of his brain cells still are intact. 

And consider this: Trump mentions that Todd Blanche "kept me out of jail"  twice. And Blanche did not save him from legal peril for a short period of time; he did it "for years."

This suggests to me that Trump has a genuine concern he did something so wrong, so damning that, without Blanche's intervention, it could have landed him behind bars. We should note here that Trump uses the term "jail" probably because, like many Americans, he uses that term and "prison" interchangeably. In fact, the two terms have different meanings, with jail usually used for relatively brief stays (often while a jailee awaits trial or disposition of his case) and prison reserved for more serious offenses (often used for years or decades of incarceration).

In this instance, Trump's mind probably was on prison. I suspect Trump would guffaw at the notion of jail. He almost certainly knows that someone of his wealth and status is unlikely to land in jail. After all, members of the privileged class can afford the kind of high-priced lawyers who can convince a judge their clients will appear for hearings and such.

At this point, we should consider this question: How many times has Todd Blanche represented Trump in criminal cases. TIME magazine provides the answer in a profile of Blanche published on April 2, 2026:

Prior to joining the Department of Justice, Blanche, 51, represented the President in three of the four criminal cases he has faced. In the hush-money trial in which Trump was ultimately convicted on 34 felony counts of falsifying business records to conceal a 2016 payment to an adult film star, Blanche served as his lead defense attorney. He also defended Trump—to more favorable results—in the federal cases brought by Special Counsel Jack Smith over his alleged efforts to overturn the 2020 election and mishandling of classified documents. Both cases were dismissed after Trump won re-election in 2024.

The two Jack Smith cases, which likely were by far the strongest and most important cases against Trump, now are behind him because voters returned him to the White House. Trump has attempted several avenues to have his hush-money convictions overturned, but that has not been resolved at the time of this writing. The judge in that case sentenced Trump to an "unconditional discharge," which meant no prison, probation or fines, so that case essentially is behind him, too.

An alert reader might be thinking, "Schnauzer, Todd Blanche is acting attorney general, which means he can no longer be Trump's personal attorney." And here is my response: "Technically, you are correct. But we are talking about Donald Trump here, and history tells us he wants his AGs to make personal loyalty to the president their No. 1 priority -- with administration of justice somewhere way down the list. 

"Both Blanche and his predecessor, Pam Bondi, have proven willing to bend and/or break all kinds of rules -- including mandates of the Justice Department Manual that forbid them from considering the president's desires on charging or non-charging decisions -- to curry favor with the White House. Bondi and Blanche have proven that they are happy to essentially turn the U.S. Department of Justice into Trump's personal law firm. 

That Todd Blanche was willing to indict James Comey in the absurd "seashells by the seashore case" is proof that he happily places Trump's desire for revenge over serving the public interest.

So, where do we stand in regards to Trump's peculiar statement that Todd Blanche "has kept me out of jail for years"? In my view, Trump is making a confession, one hidden by goofy, scrambled language.

We know that all of Trump's criminal matters -- the ones that have gone to court -- are behind him, at least in terms of substantive punishment. At the risk of getting into "psycho babble," I think Trump's statement about being kept from jail was an example of his sub-conscious talking out loud, stating matters that his conscious brain was not actively planning to say. 

We know that it is not uncommon for subconscious thoughts to become vocalized, perhaps as Freudian slips or cognitive errors (slips of the tongue).

So what criminal matters could be weighing so heavily on Trump's mind? His statement that Todd Blanche has kept him out of prison "for years," suggests Trump knows serious legal jeopardy is hanging over his head. It hasn't come in the form of a court case yet, but that might only be due to his desperate efforts to keep it out of public view -- and the willingness of Blanche and Bondi to unlawfully protect him. 

Trump's subconscious seems to realize this is a matter where no statute of limitations is likely to save him. This is from a query to AI Overview:

  • Criminal Cases: Federal law (18 U.S.C. § 3283) dictates that there is no statute of limitations for the prosecution of sexual abuse, physical abuse, or kidnapping of a child under the age of 18.
  • Donald Trump might not know much about the law, but I suspect he knows that. In my view, this knowledge -- even if it is buried deep in Trump's subconscious -- is the driver of his strange comments about being kept out of jail "for years." And it all points, of course, to Trump's documented ties to the late sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein and the allegations of victims that Trump was involved in horrifying activities, including rape and murder. Trump and his allies have managed to largely stonewall the public on the full extent of his activities related to Epstein. But the president's subconscious seems to know that time is on the side of justice.