09/30/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 09/30/2025 12:41
'Preventing Political Prosecutions Act' Would Establish Institutional Guardrails on Coordination Between White House and Department of Justice; Create Private Right of Action; Strengthen Inspector General Oversight
Read Provisions of the Act Here
Washington, DC - Following the indictment of former FBI Director James Comey at the personal direction of President Donald Trump and reports that the Department of Justice is drafting plans to investigate progressive organizations, Congressman Dan Goldman (NY-10) and U.S. Senator Richard Blumenthal (D-CT) today announced a framework for new legislation to enact guardrails to prevent the Trump Administration and future Administrations from misusing the justice system to target political opponents. This legislation will be titled the 'Preventing Political Prosecutions Act.'
"Donald Trump has taken a sledgehammer to the very foundation of our democracy by so blatantly weaponizing the justice system for his political purposes," Rep. Dan Goldman said. "By turning the attorney general into his personal avenger, he has laid bare the pressing need to establish firm and lasting statutory reforms to insulate the Department of Justice from partisan politics. I am proud to partner with Senator Blumenthal on this critical legislation and I hope all of our colleagues on both sides of the aisle who believe in our democracy and the rule of law will join us."
"Donald Trump is perverting our justice system by indictments on demand- directing prosecutions based on vengeance and vanity, not facts and law. To help halt the spiraling crisis of destructive abuse, we are developing legislation to install safeguards- beginning with a right of action against federal officials who engage in malicious prosecution and personal or political targeting," Senator Richard Blumenthal said."Some of these reforms are sweeping, because the threat we face is unprecedented. There must be accountability for federal officials who use the vast power of prosecution for personal or political ends. We must uphold the long-revered ethos and rules of the Department of Justice that indictments meet rigorous standards of fact and law. These reforms will make our justice system fairer for all Americans. Today it's Comey. Tomorrow it could be you."
The Thursday night indictment of Comey occurred only after Trump replaced the non-partisan, career prosecutor supervising the case with one of his own personal attorneys, because the career prosecutor concluded there was insufficient evidence to bring a case.
Trump has directed his Attorney General to target other political opponents as well. Last week, President Trump posted on Truth Social, instructing Attorney General Bondi to move forward with cases against U.S. Senator Adam Schiff (D-CA) and New York Attorney General Letitia James, in addition to Comey, saying "[t]hey're all guilty as hell." The attorney prosecuting the Comey case was installed after her predecessor was pushed out for also refusing to bring fraud charges against James.
At the end of last week, the New York Times reported that a senior official at the Justice Department instructed several U.S. attorney's offices to begin plans to investigate an organization - the Open Society Foundations - affiliated with progressive causes and funded by a major Democratic donor whom Trump has said "should be put in jail."
The Preventing Political Prosecutions Actwould:
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