Congresswoman Yassamin Ansari (D-AZ) has made one thing clear: Pam Bondi's firing doesn't mean the fight is over.
Within hours of the news of Bondi's firing, Rep. Ansari took to X to remind the public that losing a job and escaping accountability are two very different things.
President Donald Trump announced Thursday that he was replacing Attorney General Pam Bondi with Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche, who will serve in an acting capacity.
President Trump praised Bondi in a Truth Social post, calling her a "Great American Patriot" and crediting her tenure with driving murder rates to their lowest point since 1900. Blanche echoed the sentiment, thanking both Trump and Bondi and pledging to continue the department's work.
Ansari's Note on Accountability
However, Rep. Ansari shared a very different take.
The congresswoman, who had previously introduced Articles of Impeachment against Bondi, said the firing doesn't close the book on accountability.
She argued Bondi was responsible for, what she called, the most egregious cover-up in American history -- a reference to the handling of the Epstein files -- and made clear that losing her job doesn't exempt her from answering to Congress.
"She may be fired, but she is not above the law," Ansari wrote, adding that Bondi must still comply with a subpoena to testify before the Oversight Committee regarding the release of the Epstein files.
Ansari didn't stop there. In a second post, she raised a different concern: who is and isn't being let go?
Noting that both Bondi and Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem are women, Ansari questioned why male cabinet members with their own controversies, specifically naming Kash Patel and Pete Hegseth, appear to be keeping their jobs.
Who Will Fill The Seat?
Meanwhile, speculation is already swirling about who could permanently fill the Attorney General seat.
The Floridian reported Florida Governor Ron DeSantis (R-FL) has been floated as a potential candidate to join the Trump administration in that role, though nothing has been confirmed.
For Ansari, though, the focus remains squarely on accountability, whoever holds the office.
"We won't stop fighting until every victim gets justice," she concluded.












