'Oops!' Todd Blanche's 'freudian slip of the year' sends internet into frenzy
Acting U.S. Attorney General Todd Blanche testifies before a Senate Judiciary Committee confirmation hearing on his nomination to be attorney general, on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., U.S., July 15, 2026. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst

Todd Blanche's four-word stumble during a combative hearing Tuesday caused a stir among internet critics.

The acting attorney general told Sen. John Kennedy (R-LA) he was Trump's "lawyer," then hastily corrected to "was his lawyer." Critics, watchdogs and legal observers flooded social media, treating the slip as an admission of what they feared when he was announced as Pam Bondi's replacement.

The progressive account Call to Activism captured the mood, declaring Blanche had "said the quiet part out loud." A near-identical reaction came from academic Dr. Sam Youssef, while Nate Weisberg, editor at Washington Monthly, simply narrated the exchange and added: "Oops!!"

Grant Stern, executive editor at Occupy Democrats, argued the Republican senator had "accidentally" asked the most "revealing" question of the hearing. Former Obama White House staffer Don Sisson went further, branding it the "Freudian slip of the year."

For advocacy groups, the moment wasn't a gaffe so much as a confession.

Stand Up America said the attorney general is supposed to be "the people's lawyer, not the president's personal attorney." The Lincoln Project bluntly cast Blanche as Trump's personal criminal lawyer whose only job is to protect the president.

Democratic strategist Mike Nellis didn't mince words, calling it a "huge f---up" for a nominee mid-confirmation.

The pile-on somes as Blanche's critics have pressed for weeks that Trump's former personal attorney never truly stopped serving him. Blanche has led the Justice Department since April, when Trump ousted Bondi, and faces a knife-edge vote in the Judiciary Committee, where a single Republican defection could sink him.