In yet another blow to the left’s relentless crusade against Donald Trump, two major federal cases against the president-elect have crumbled under their own weight. On Monday, U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan officially dismissed the January 6 criminal case in Washington, D.C., “without prejudice,” following a motion by Special Counsel Jack Smith to unwind the case. The classified documents case in Florida is also on its last legs, as the 11th Circuit is expected to grant Smith’s request for dismissal in the coming days.
This is a seismic shift in the Democrats’ ongoing efforts to weaponize the legal system against Trump, and it’s hard not to see this as yet another vindication for the man who has endured more witch hunts than the entire Salem era. Trump’s communications director Steven Cheung nailed it when he called the DOJ’s decision “a major victory for the rule of law.” Cheung added, “The American people and President Trump want an immediate end to the political weaponization of our justice system and look forward to uniting our country.”
Smith’s retreat isn’t just tactical—it’s a full-blown admission that the cases against Trump were doomed from the start. After a July 1 Supreme Court ruling that granted former presidents some immunity for official acts, Smith scrambled to salvage his narrative with a superseding indictment. But even legal experts called it a weak “rehashing” of the original charges, and it quickly unraveled.
And where does this leave Smith? On his way out, apparently. Trump has already vowed to fire the special counsel “within two seconds” of taking office, but insiders say Smith might jump ship before Trump gets the chance.
The collapse of these federal cases is a seismic blow to the Democrats’ long-running campaign to weaponize the justice system against Donald Trump. For years, their strategy has been clear: use the courts as a political weapon to sideline their most formidable opponent. But in the end, their desperate maneuvers couldn’t withstand legal scrutiny—or the will of the American people.
Trump’s decisive electoral victory in 2024 sent an unmistakable message: Americans are tired of partisan witch hunts and want leaders focused on fixing the country, not dividing it. Jack Smith’s dismissal of the charges and the DOJ’s subsequent climbdown only confirm what Trump supporters have known all along: these cases were never about justice—they were about politics.
As Trump prepares to retake the Oval Office, his resolve to end the politicization of the justice system is stronger than ever. The DOJ must be held accountable for its abuses under Merrick Garland, and special counsel Jack Smith’s reckless crusade cannot go unanswered. There must be severe consequences for those who weaponize the law against political opponents.
Meanwhile, Democrats are left clinging to crumbling narratives and increasingly desperate legal strategies in New York and Georgia. From Manhattan DA Alvin Bragg’s absurd hush-money case to Fani Willis’s chaotic racketeering charges, it’s clear the left is grasping at straws. Even as their cases fall apart, Democrats can’t seem to let go of their Trump obsession—an obsession that only exposes their hypocrisy and fear.