Glenn Beck raised concerns about public confidence in federal law enforcement during a discussion with Harmeet Dhillon, focusing on what he described as repeated investigations that fail to result in charges or trials.
Beck said Americans are losing faith after years of high-profile probes that appear to stall without consequences.
“Do you think that the people at the FBI and the DOJ in all levels realize that, because I know you do, do they realize how to the end the American people are that they’re starting to lose faith if we don’t start to see people at least charged and have a fair trial, I’m not even saying that they go to jail, hopefully they would if they broke a law,” Beck said.
He pointed to ongoing investigations, including those tied to the Clinton Foundation, and said he has little confidence that anyone will be held accountable.
“We keep getting investigation after investigation after investigation, and then it just sits there,” he added.
Beck warned that the lack of visible justice could have long-term consequences if the Justice Department and the FBI do not act.
He said the agencies have a responsibility to restore confidence by enforcing the law evenly, cautioning that failure to do so could worsen political and institutional problems heading into the next election cycle.
“And we’re at this place to where it’s up to the DOJ and the FBI to do their job and then start bringing some justice, because if we lose in 28 and you haven’t cleaned up and set clear rules of the law, does matter, all these people got away with it last time, it’s going to be 1000 times worse in 2028”
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Dhillon responded by acknowledging the concern and describing what she said has been her experience inside the Department of Justice.
“No, I hear you, and I’m worried about it. I’m a citizen who loves this country, and as you know, I’ve donated countless millions of dollars of my billable time to being engaged in politics,” Dhillon said.
She said efforts to set new standards and priorities within her department led to widespread departures.
“I had about 400 attorneys plus working in my department, I have 1/3 of that now, because when I set the rules of what we’re going to do here in this department, two thirds of the people pieced out and quit,” Dhillon said.
She also said some remaining staff have leaked internal actions to the press. “That’s the fight in my department,” she said.
Dhillon said the challenge extends beyond her immediate office and reflects the size and structure of the federal bureaucracy.
She noted that more than 100,000 people work at the Department of Justice, many within the FBI, and said only a small portion of leadership positions are politically appointed.
“It’s only the very top, top, top layer of that that is politically appointed and committed to the President’s agenda,” she said.
According to Dhillon, most personnel are long-serving staff who continue operating under established practices.
“I would say the vast majority of that agency is, you know, legacy, doing what they’re doing, much of which was not good for America,” she said.
WATCH:
.@AAGDhillon tells me that almost a YEAR into her tenure at the DOJ, she’s STILL fighting the Deep State within her department: “I had about 400 attorneys working in my department. I have 1/3 of that now because when I set the rules of what we’re going to do here, 2/3 of the… pic.twitter.com/UbgDXNRTOl
— Glenn Beck (@glennbeck) December 18, 2025
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