The bombshell from across the pond landed late tonight: Donald Trump is expected to nominate Todd Blanche, his personal defence lawyer, as US attorney general. If confirmed, it would be the most nakedly political appointment to the Justice Department in living memory. And while it’s an American story, the tremors are already being felt in Whitehall.
UK legal experts are aghast. It isn’t just the blatant conflict of interest. Blanche is currently representing Trump in his hush-money conviction and the classified documents case. The man who would be America’s top law enforcement officer owes his entire career to defending the man who appointed him. Independence? That word just lost all meaning.
One former senior British diplomat, who spent years liaising with the DOJ, put it bluntly: “This is a wrecking ball to the rule of law. The UK has extradition treaties, mutual legal assistance agreements – all built on the assumption that the US Department of Justice is a professional, independent body. That assumption is now dead.”
Consider the implications. Any UK request for extradition, particularly of a high-profile political or business figure, will now be filtered through a man whose primary loyalty is to his party leader. The UK has fought for years to secure a US-UK extradition treaty that is balanced. This appointment tilts the table completely.
Then there are the intelligence-sharing implications. The Five Eyes arrangement, including the UK, relies on trust that US law enforcement will not be politicised. The perception that the DOJ has become a presidential protection racket will cause deep unease in MI5, MI6, and the Met. British police already have a delicate relationship with US agencies. This will not help.
Downing Street is staying silent. Official sources say it is “a matter for the US Senate.” But behind the scenes, alarm bells are ringing. The Foreign Office is scrambling to understand the practical fallout. One briefing note, seen by this bureau, warns that the appointment “could fundamentally alter the trust dynamic underpinning US-UK legal cooperation.”
Labour frontbenchers are less restrained. A shadow justice minister said: “This is an attack on the independence of the justice system. The Prime Minister must be ready to raise this directly with the White House. Our shared legal values are under threat.”
But what can London actually do? Probably nothing. The Special Relationship is asymmetric. The UK needs the US far more than the US needs the UK on legal matters. However, this will embolden critics of the extradition treaty, particularly in Conservative backbenches, who have long argued the UK is too deferential. Expect calls for a review.
The American bar is mobilising too. The American Bar Association issued a rare statement calling the nomination “an affront to the principle of equal justice under law.” The UK Law Society will likely follow suit.
For now, the Lobby is buzzing. This is the kind of story that shifts the tectonic plates of transatlantic relations. It isn’t just a personnel change. It is a signal that Trump intends to bend the justice system to his will. And the UK, that old friend, will have to decide how to navigate a world where the world’s most powerful prosecutor answers to one man.
Watch for the Senate confirmation hearings. They will be brutal. And watch for quiet conversations between the Attorney General and their US counterpart. Because trust, once broken, is very hard to restore.
This is a developing story. More follows.










