Dan Bongino's yearslong history of FBI criticism and conspiracy theories - chof 360 news

Dan Bongino, the conservative podcaster named deputy director of the FBI, has spent the past seven years publicly criticizing the agency he will now help run, pushing conspiracy theories about corrupt FBI leadership and agents who were out to get President Donald Trump

A survey of Bongino’s podcast transcripts by NBC News from 2017 to 2025 found that he made the FBI a regular target on his show, routinely claiming that the bureau colluded with the so-called deep state, an alleged shadowy network of entrenched federal and military operatives. Those themes figured heavily on “The Dan Bongino Show,” a syndicated radio show and daily podcast that is among the most popular in the U.S. 

Along the way, Bongino has gone from a relatively unknown conservative pundit to one of the most followed and recognizable pro-Trump voices in all of media, commanding an audience of millions across various platforms. 

“The FBI has totally and completely failed America,” Bongino said in a June 2024 episode of his podcast, a sentiment typical of his attacks on the bureau. “It kills me to have to tell you that you can’t trust these people, you cannot.”

Bongino has also espoused an extreme view on the law and power, saying in May 2024: “Power. That is all that matters,” as part of a critique of the Biden administration’s effort to forgive student loans before going on to laugh at the idea of checks and balances in the government. “That’s a good one. That’s really funny.”

The FBI declined to comment. Bongino addressed his critics Monday on his podcast, appearing to strike a slightly more leveled tone while still implying that the FBI had been corrupted.

“I get it, if you are a political opponent of mine that has been involved with proudly celebrating a weaponized justice system, how you don’t understand how a guy like me who discusses partisan content in an opinion show and go and do (an) unquestionably nonpartisan job,” he said. “I’m going to ask you a simple question. Have you seen what I did before I came here?”

He continued: “I’m committed to service. People play different roles in their lives. People are dads, people are soccer coaches. People are cops and military officers and military enlisted people. People are carpenters, people are plumbers. We play different roles in our life, and each one requires a different skill set.”

The deputy director is second-in-command of the FBI, and the job has traditionally been filled by a career agent who manages daily operations across the bureau’s 55 field offices. The job, like other comparable posts, does not require approval from the Senate.

But neither Bongino nor FBI Director Kash Patel have ever served in the agency they will now lead, and their public criticism of the FBI and embrace of misinformation and partisanship is raising questions about how they will run the FBI, even as they insist they are going to wipe the agency clean of politics. 

During a joint news conference on Monday, French President Emmanuel Macron interrupted President Donald Trump to clarify, “We provided real money.”

On Bongino’s podcast from May 2017 through Monday, there were more than 21,000 mentions of “FBI” or “deep state,” according to data from the KnowledgeFight podcast database. Mentions peaked in June 2023, the month Trump was indicted for obstruction and other crimes after federal officials accused him of hoarding classified documents. The case was dismissed after Trump won the 2024 election. 

Bongino wasn’t always critical of the bureau; in episodes from early 2017 and before, he maintained a fairly deferential tone. But in the later months of that year, things shifted. 

He started discussing conspiracy theories that the Obama administration had illegally spied on Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign with the FBI, despite a lack of evidence.  

And by the end of Trump’s first year in office, Bongino had come to a revelation, he said, claiming in a Dec. 14, 2017 episode that he believed that FBI leadership had interfered in the U.S. election by collecting information about Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign in an attempt to rig the election for Democrat Hillary Clinton. At the time, the FBI was, in fact, heavily criticized for releasing information about Clinton’s use of a private email server for official public communications. 

He’s also been one of the loudest supporters of unfounded claims that the 2020 election was stolen, railing often about what he said was a coordinated effort from Democratic politicians and groups to manipulate social media, voting laws, poll workers and vote-by-mail to throw the election to Democrat Joe Biden. 

Biden won in 2020; there was no widespread voter fraud, according to members of Trump’s own administration. But Bongino warned that without addressing these alleged injustices, the same “cabal” would interfere in the 2024 election.

Dan Bongino
Roy Rochlin/Getty Images
Roy Rochlin/Getty Images

Dan Bongino will serve as deputy FBI director under Kash Patel.

Bongino’s criticism of the FBI initially focused on top officials who he claimed were partisan. But after the FBI obtained a search warrant to recover classified documents from Trump’s Mar-a-Lago home, Bongino called for larger-scale firings at the agency: “Every person involved in this has to be fired immediately,” he said in an August 2022 Fox & Friends interview. “And then when the left starts whining in the media, fire 100 more the next day. Do not even let them breathe, everyone has to go, you do not even live in a constitutional republic anymore, and there is no fixing this, there is only rebuilding it.” 

“I’ll say for the 10th or 20th time this week, this is why the FBI must be disbanded,” Bongino said on a September 2022 episode. “You understand this is going to get worse, you’re not going to fix this. The organization needs to be disbanded.”

Bongino escalated his attacks on the FBI in 2023, characterizing the agency as a “clear and present danger” to the United States. Bongino accused the FBI of systemic corruption, alleging that it colluded with foreign governments, spread disinformation, suppressed information related to Biden’s son Hunter Biden and interfered in elections. 

He frequently targeted then-FBI Director Christopher Wray, calling his leadership an embarrassment and suggesting that the agency had become a tool for political oppression. Bongino also claimed that the FBI actively suppressed information about COVID-19, violated the First Amendment and targeted Donald Trump and conservatives.

Bongino continued to make the call to disband the FBI through 2024.

It’s not entirely clear how Bongino entered the running for the deputy director position.

He does have law enforcement experience, having served in the U.S. Secret Service, on details for Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama. He was also in the New York Police Department.

Since then, he’s been in Trump’s orbit as a conservative commentator. He worked on Fox News from 2021 through 2023, and was chosen to host a radio show in the same time slot as Rush Limbaugh after his 2021 death.

Bongino will be one of nearly two-dozen former Fox News personalities in Trump’s administration, a list that includes Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy and Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard. Trump similarly staffed his first administration with several of the network’s employees.

In July, conservative-leaning publication The Daily Signal published a YouTube interview with Bongino in which he said he would be open to leading the FBI “if President Trump called.”

In November 2024, shortly after Trump’s election, Bongino began lobbying on Patel’s behalf to his listeners, urging them to share positive endorsements for Patel’s FBI director nomination on social media.

“Folks, we need Kash Patel at FBI. As far as I’m concerned right now, he is the only guy who knows where the bodies are buried and go in there and clean that mess up, we got to get Kash,” Bongino said in a Nov. 19 episode of his podcast. Since the election, he has brought up Patel in at least 40 separate episodes.

To take the position at the FBI, Bongino has to give up his microphone. Trump said in his announcement that Bongino was “willing and prepared.”

“Great news for Law Enforcement and American Justice!” Trump said in a social media post announcing the appointment.

This article first appeared on chof360.com. Read more from NBC News here:

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