
The day before Blanche's confirmation hearing, a federal judge quashed a settlement between Trump, his business and family, and the Internal Revenue Service IRS.
The deal included immunity from future audits and the creation of a $1.7bn (£1.2bn) "anti-weaponisation fund" for people who believed they were unfairly targeted by the government.
The settlement had sparked bipartisan outrage on Capitol Hill, and senators from both parties questioned Blanche about the agreement. Republican senators, in particular, seemed to want Blanche on the record saying that the fund was truly dead.
"You have no reason to believe that the so-called weaponisation fund will continue because of the settlement, agreement, is that correct?" Senator Mike Lee, a Republican, asked Blanche.
"I am confident it will not," Blanche said.
"It should never be paid out," said another Republican senator, Thom Tillis. He pressed Blanche for an "agreed to piece of text, coming from the administration, that just renders this thing dead, gone."
The Epstein files are the biggest challenge to face the Justice Department since Trump's return.
After public outcry, Congress mandated that the Justice Department release its trove of millions of files related to the investigation into the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. However, the slow pace of their release and extensive redactions have drawn criticism from lawmakers and survivors.
Blanche faced probing questions from both parties about the justice department's handling of the files.
About a dozen women, wearing t-shirts that featured images of the redacted files, attended the hearing to register their protest.
Senate Judiciary Chairman Chuck Grassley, the top Republican on the panel, asked Blanche about "problematic redactions", "insufficient effort" on following investigative leads" and "refusal to meet with victims", as well as questions surrounding the transfer of Epstein accomplice Ghislaine Maxwell to a lower-security prison.
Blanche responded that millions of files within a short time-frame was a "Herculean task".
"We reviewed over six million pages," he said, describing the process department attorneys followed to "apply appropriate redactions".
"There were mistakes that were made, and so approximately 1% of the redactions had to be fixed," Blanche added. "We had dozens of lawyers on call."
During one exchange, Democratic Senator Richard Blumenthal asked if Blanche would "apologise" to Epstein survivors for "the mishandling and mistakes that were made by the United States Department of Justice?
"I will absolutely say that any mistake that we made should not have been made," Blanche said. "And I very much. I very much apologise."
When former attorney general Pam Bondi appeared before congressional panels, she took a combative tone with lawmakers who questioned the agency's work.
Blanche, in comparison, was more measured - responding to pointed questions with technical and lawyerly responses. At times, however, Blanche allowed flashes of the pugnacious defence attorney who had grilled witnesses in Trump's criminal trial and sparred with the judge.
"That's an extraordinarily obnoxious question, Senator," Blanche told Senator Sheldon Whitehouse, who had asked him about FBI Director Kash Patel's fitness for office.
Later in the hearing, Blanche took issue with Democratic Senator Cory Booker's rapid-fire questioning about a proposed merger between two major media corporations, Paramount and Warner-Brothers Discovery.
Booker asked him about his role in reviewing a decision to close an investigation of the proposed merger, then immediately asked a follow up as Blanche began to answer.
"You don't even let me answer, man," Blanche exclaimed. The rest of the interactions between the two men was similarly tense.


