He walked out of the courthouse not in shame, but on the attack. Bob Menendez, freshly sentenced to 11 years for corruption and secretly serving a foreign government, didn’t beg for mercy — he echoed Donald Trump. He called his own conviction “political,” his prosecutors “corrupt,” and hinted he’s not done with power, or revenge, ye…
Instead of contrition, Menendez delivered a defiant script aimed straight at America’s rawest political nerve. By invoking Trump’s battles with prosecutors to defend his own conviction for bribery and acting as an agent of Egypt, he tried to recast a damning verdict as proof of a rigged, partisan justice system. The irony was impossible to miss: a Democrat, found guilty of secretly serving a foreign government, now leaning on Trump’s narrative to claim persecution.
His fall from Senate power, forced resignation, and loss of his committee gavel have not closed the door on his ambitions. Reports that he may attempt a comeback as an independent suggest he’s betting anger and distrust of institutions can be weaponized, even by a convicted former lawmaker. Menendez’s case now sits at the intersection of corruption, grievance politics, and a country increasingly unsure whom to be.