What the Interview Reveals About the Trump Administration's Gun Policy Agenda — and What It Means for the Future
There is an imminent "sea change" coming in federal firearm policy according to Acting U.S. Attorney General Todd Blanche. In a high-profile appearance at the National Rifle Association Annual Meetings in Houston he said these changes would be more expansive, more durable, and more aggressively defended in court than anything seen from a presidential administration in modern history.
"We're going to get sued," Blanche said plainly. "We don't care."
In a wide-ranging conversation with nationally-syndicated talk radio host, Tom Gresham, Blanche touched on upcoming regulatory changes, a reshaping of ATF enforcement priorities, active Supreme Court litigation, and a deliberate strategy to embed Second Amendment protections so deeply into federal regulatory infrastructure that future administrations would struggle to reverse them.
Responding to a question from Gresham, host of Gun Talk Radio, Blanche also revealed that his mother had just informed him that she has a permit to carry a concealed handgun.
"My Mom, for the first time, just told me she has a concealed carry permit! That's okay. I love it!"
Blanche offered a revealing window into how the Trump administration is approaching gun policy — not just as a political talking point, but as a legal, regulatory, and institutional project with long-term ambitions.
Here is what can be learned from what Blanche said — and what it signals about where federal gun policy is headed.
1. A Major Regulatory Overhaul Is Imminent — and Has Already Been Approved
Perhaps the most consequential disclosure in the conversation was Blanche's confirmation that the Department of Justice is "days away" from releasing a sweeping package of new firearms regulations. He stated clearly that the changes have already been approved "by the president on down" and that the release has been in preparation since the earliest days of the administration.
This is significant for several reasons. First, it confirms that the regulatory work is not aspirational — it is finished and ready to go. Second, the fact that it has been approved at the presidential level suggests this is not a bureaucratic exercise but a White House priority being executed through the DOJ. Third, Blanche's framing of the release as something that will "change everything" sets an unusually high bar for public expectations.
The one example he offered — eliminating in-person signature requirements for certain firearms transactions and allowing electronic processes similar to tax filing — hints at a broader effort to modernize and liberalize the transactional framework governing gun sales. But Blanche made clear there is more to come, deliberately holding back details for maximum impact upon release.
The gun industry, particularly Federal Firearms Licensees, is preparing for meaningful relief from regulatory burdens that have constrained their operations. Simultaneously, gun control advocacy groups and Democratic state attorneys general should be expected to file legal challenges almost immediately upon publication of the new rules.
2. The Administration Is Deliberately Building a Legally Defensible Framework — Not Just Changing Policy
One of the most strategically revealing aspects of Blanche's comments was his emphasis on the difference between policy changes and regulatory changes. He was explicit: policy can be reversed overnight by the next administration. Regulations, by contrast, must go through formal rulemaking processes to be undone — and if properly constructed, they can be defended in federal court.
This distinction explains the otherwise puzzling pace of the administration's gun agenda. Blanche acknowledged the frustration among gun owners who expected faster movement. His answer was that moving fast and moving durably are often in tension — and that this administration has chosen durability.
"We're going to get sued," he said plainly. "We don't care. We want to be in a position to defend those lawsuits and win."
The hiring of a Clarence Thomas clerk — described as the country's only dedicated Second Amendment law professor — as the DOJ's general counsel for ATF is the clearest expression of this strategy.
Blanche explained that the Trump administration's gun policy is being built to last. Unlike executive orders or policy memos, the regulatory changes being prepared are intended to require future administrations to go through full notice-and-comment rulemaking to reverse them — a process that takes years and invites its own legal challenges.
3. The "Two Steps Forward, Eight Steps Back" Pattern Is the Animating Fear
Blanche's most candid political observation was his characterization of how Republican administrations have historically approached gun rights — making modest gains that are then dramatically reversed when Democrats return to power.
"Going back to the Reagan administration, the gun industry takes two steps forward. And then a Democrat comes in and takes us eight steps back," he said. "We're not going to take two steps forward. We're going to go forward a mile."
This framing reveals the core anxiety driving the administration's approach. It is not enough to win politically. The goal is to make the wins structurally difficult to undo. That is why the emphasis is on regulatory change rather than executive action, on institutional hiring rather than temporary task forces, and on Supreme Court litigation rather than administrative guidance.
It's clear this administration is explicitly trying to break a cycle that gun rights advocates have found deeply demoralizing. Whether they succeed will depend heavily on how durable their regulatory work proves to be in federal courts — and whether the Supreme Court's current composition delivers favorable rulings on Second Amendment cases
4. ATF's Enforcement Culture Is Being Fundamentally Redirected
Blanche's comments about ATF represent a significant departure from recent precedent. Under the Biden administration, ATF was widely criticized by the firearm industry for aggressive enforcement against federal firearms license holders including a zero-tolerance policy under which minor paperwork errors could result in license revocation.
Blanche stated clearly that this posture has ended. "They are no longer going after FFLs," he said. "There's no longer a zero-tolerance policy where if you don't cross a T or dot an I we're going to shut you down."
But more telling was his vision for how ATF resources should be redeployed. Rather than directing civil inspectors to scrutinize licensed dealers over administrative compliance, Blanche said the agency should be "hiring special agents to go arrest robbers."
This is a philosophical reorientation, not just a policy tweak. It reflects a view — long held by the firearm industry and Second Amendment advocates — that federal firearms enforcement has been weaponized against lawful gun owners and dealers while failing to address violent crime committed with illegally obtained weapons.
For gun control advocates, however, this shift raises concerns about whether federal oversight of licensed dealers will be sufficiently robust to catch bad actors within the FFL system.
5. The Administration Is Pursuing a Supreme Court Strategy With National Implications
Blanche's discussion of ongoing Supreme Court litigation revealed an ambitious legal strategy aimed not just at winning individual cases but at establishing national precedents that would constrain even the most gun-restrictive blue states.
He also expressed a desire for the Supreme Court to take up cases involving semi-automatic rifle bans — what critics call "assault weapon" bans — arguing that the Court's rulings in Heller and Bruen already provide the constitutional foundation to strike them down. The challenge, he acknowledged, is getting the Court to accept such a case and issue a definitive ruling that states cannot ignore.
"Until there's enough lawsuits that they lose, they're not going to stop," he said of states that continue to pass such laws.
6. The Team Assembled at DOJ Is Ideologically Unified in a Way That Is Historically Unusual
Perhaps the most underappreciated aspect of Blanche's remarks was his description of the personnel now running federal gun policy. By his account, every key position — from the White House Counsel's office to the ATF directorship to the DOJ's civil rights division to the general counsel of ATF — is occupied by someone with a strong, demonstrated commitment to Second Amendment rights.
This degree of ideological alignment across institutions is rare. Typically, even in Republican administrations, some positions are filled by career officials or political appointees whose views on gun policy are more moderate, less engaged, or even opposed to individual gun rights. Blanche's description suggests a deliberate effort to staff not just the top of the DOJ but the mid-level legal and policy architecture with like-minded officials.
Assistant Attorney General Harmeet Dillon's role is particularly notable. As head of the DOJ's civil rights division, she has reoriented a division that largely ignored the Second Amendment. Her use of that platform to file pro-Second Amendment lawsuits represents a significant and novel use of the civil rights infrastructure of the federal government.
The cohesion Blanche described gives the administration's gun policy unusual staying power during its tenure. But it also raises questions about what happens to the institutional culture of the DOJ and ATF once that team is gone — particularly if career staff who remain are ideologically out of step with the appointees now directing them.
7. The AR-15 and Semi-Automatic Rifles Remain a Central Focus
Blanche's comments on the AR-15 were notable for their directness and their legal framing. He did not merely defend the AR-15 as a popular sporting rifle. He argued explicitly that its classification as a sporting rifle is legally irrelevant to its Second Amendment protection.
"That is a rifle that Americans have every right to own like any other firearm," said Blanche.
This is a significant legal argument, and it tracks closely with the reasoning in Bruen and Heller, which grounded Second Amendment protection in the concept of arms "in common use" rather than in any particular use case. By making this argument in a public forum, Blanche is signaling that the DOJ intends to challenge the regulatory framework that has been used to restrict the AR-15 on sporting-use grounds.
Blanche made it clear that federal regulations restricting the AR-15 or similar semi-automatic rifles based on sporting-use classifications are likely to be targeted in the forthcoming regulatory package. This would be one of the most consequential changes the administration could make and would almost certainly trigger immediate legal challenges from gun control organizations and state attorneys general.
The Broader Takeaway: A Federal Government Transformed on Gun Policy
Stepping back from the specifics, what the Blanche interview reveals most clearly is that the federal government's relationship to the Second Amendment has undergone a transformation that goes far deeper than rhetoric or campaign promises.
The combination of imminent regulatory overhaul, aggressive litigation posture, reoriented ATF enforcement, ideologically aligned personnel, and a deliberate strategy to make changes structurally durable adds up to something that the Second Amendment community has long hoped for but rarely seen: a federal government that is not merely permissive toward these constitutionally-guaranteed rights under the Second Amendment, but is actively, institutionally, and legally committed to expanding them.
Whether that transformation survives the inevitable legal challenges — and whether it proves durable beyond the current administration — remains the central question. Based on everything Blanche outlined in his interview with Gun Talk Media in Houston, the administration clearly is aware of that question and has structured its approach with the explicit goal of answering it in the affirmative.
The firearm industry, gun owners, and gun control advocates alike should take the coming weeks seriously. The regulatory release Blanche described is not a routine administrative action. By his own account, it is the opening move in a long-term effort to permanently reshape the federal government's relationship to the Second Amendment.
Regardless of how one views this reform of individual rights, on the facts of what is being planned and why — there is no longer much ambiguity.