Attorney General Pam Bondi threw the Maine government Janet Mills on Wednesday, after the democratic legislature troubled the transient athlete controvers in her state.
Bondi said on “America’s Newsroom” with Bill Hammer and Dana Perino that Mills was “very wrong” just to brush the transnry athlete problem because there were only two cases in the state. Maine has refused to change her policies to keep biological men out of girls and women’s sports.
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Attorney General Pam Bondi looks at during a cabinet meeting in the White House in Washington, DC, Monday, March 24, 2025. (Samuel Corum/Sipa/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
“First to say, only two are shocking. We gave two examples … First, this boys are in girls’ dressing room,” Bondi said. “One is too many. It’s ridiculous what she said and it doesn’t just affect a young woman – it affects the whole team. It affects the whole team, the whole sport within that school.
“These young women are unable to compete because of a boy. The boy in 2024 came in 43.
Mills appeared on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” to discuss her match with several departments in the Trump administration, which started when the state refused to comply with President Donald Trump’s “No men in women’s sports” banning biological men in girls and women’s sports.
The appearance came after a judge prevented the US Department of Agriculture (USDA) from freezing funds to Maine. It all came from the state’s rejection of complying with title IX rules.

Pam Bondi recognizes family and friends who are present as she delivers opening notes during a Senate Legal Committee hearing about her nomination to be a lawyer in the United States on January 15, 2025 in Washington, DC (Jack Gruber / USA Today Network via Imag images)
Maine School District moves to ban trans athletes from girls’ sports, sitting with Trump over state authorities
“The CEO is obliged by the Constitution to take care that the laws are faithfully implemented, not to make the laws, not to invent the laws or interpret the laws of tweet or instagram post or press release or executive order. He is not allowed to do so.”
Mills remembered the letters she received from the Department of Education, USDA and Department of Health and Human Services. She described a April 2nd -letter from USDA secretary Brooke Rollins as “pretty shaking” and said some described it as a “ransom -note.”
In the letter, the administration threatened to cut off funding to Maine due to the state’s continued allowance of biological men in girls and women’s sports.
“Right the next day, because there are perhaps a maximum of two transient athletes competing in Maine schools right now, they decided to close the funding for our school’s nutrition program, the School Lunch program, completely, where 172,000 Maine -School Children rely on their school meals. It didn’t make sense,” Mills said.

Democratic head of government Janet Mills will be delivering his state address on January 30, 2024 at the State House in Augusta, Maine. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty, File)
She added that the lawsuits against the state were “not rational.”
Bondi announced a civil lawsuit against Maine over his refusal of banning transient athletes from women’s sports.