Waiting for accountability in Trump's second term.
By Brian C. Joondeph
American Thinker
March 24, 2026
For nearly a decade, Americans were told that powerful institutions had been weaponized against a sitting president and his supporters. Intelligence agencies, federal law enforcement, and political operatives were accused of bending the machinery of government toward partisan ends.
The promise from President Donald Trump was clear: expose it, clean it up, and drain the swamp.
Now more than a year into Trump's second term, many voters are beginning to ask a simple question: Where are the results?
A recent Rasmussen Reports survey suggests that frustration may be growing. Approval ratings for FBI Director Kash Patel are slipping. Only 40 percent of likely voters view Patel favorably. Even more striking, just 32 percent believe he is performing better than previous FBI directors, while 37 percent think he is doing worse.
Those numbers are not catastrophic. But they are a signal.
For the mainstream press, this is just another fluctuation in Washington approval ratings. For many Trump supporters, however, it reflects something deeper - the growing perception that promises of accountability have yet to materialize.
The disappointment isn't ideological.
It's transactional.
Patel built his reputation by exposing what many Americans believe was a coordinated effort inside the national security bureaucracy to undermine Trump during his first term. As a senior investigator for the House Intelligence Committee working with Jim Jordan and Devin Nunes, Patel helped uncover problems with surveillance warrants targeting Trump associate Carter Page.
He later documented what he viewed as systemic corruption in his book Government Gangsters, arguing that unelected bureaucracies had accumulated enormous power with little public accountability.
In other words, Patel understands the problem.
That's precisely why expectations for him are so high.
For years, Trump and his allies faced a barrage of investigations, subpoenas, indictments, and televised hearings. The Russia collusion probe. The Mueller investigation. Two impeachments. Criminal indictments. The unprecedented FBI search of Trump's home at Mar-a-Lago conducted by the FBI.
Supporters watched these events unfold in real time.
Yet controversies involving Hillary Clinton's email server, Joe Biden's handling of classified documents, and Hunter Biden's abandoned laptop appeared - at least to critics - to receive far gentler treatment.
Whether one agrees with that interpretation or not, millions of Americans clearly believe there was a double standard.
Trump returned to office promising to correct it.
But visible accountability has been scarce.
There have been no sweeping prosecutions tied to the origins of the Russia investigation. No major trials involving alleged surveillance abuses. No public reckoning for the officials accused of misusing federal power.
After years of relentless investigations aimed at Trump, the lack of reciprocal accountability is glaring.
Trump's political base doesn't want rhetoric.
It wants results.
But the frustration goes beyond the Russia probe.
During the campaign, Trump promised unprecedented transparency on a series of long-running controversies that many Americans believe were never fully explained.
These include the still-classified records related to the September 11 attacks, unanswered questions surrounding the 2017 Las Vegas mass shooting, the long-promised audit of America's gold reserves at Fort Knox, and the complete investigative files surrounding convicted sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein and his mysterious death inside a federal jail.
There are also lingering questions about the two assassination attempts against Trump during the 2024 campaign - incidents that shocked the country but remain only partially explained.
Each of these issues carries its own history of secrecy, redactions, and incomplete disclosures.
Trump's promise to "drain the swamp" created the expectation that Americans would finally see the full record.
So far, that reckoning has not arrived.
That helps explain Patel's declining numbers. It is not necessarily distrust.
Many supporters still see him as one of the few people in Washington who genuinely understands how the system works - and how it may have been abused.
But that familiarity invites an obvious question:
If he knows what happened, why hasn't anyone been held accountable?
To be fair, there are institutional constraints.
The FBI cannot arrest people simply to satisfy political impatience. Cases must withstand courtroom scrutiny, often before judges who may already be skeptical of politically charged prosecutions. A weak case would collapse quickly and likely strengthen the very institutions critics believe have been corrupted.
There are also legal realities. Many of the controversies that inflamed political debate occurred eight or nine years ago. Federal statutes of limitations may already have expired for some offenses unless prosecutors can prove continuing conspiracies or obstruction.
Those constraints make sweeping prosecutions far more complicated than campaign speeches suggest.
Still, politics operates as much on perception as on procedure.
Trump was indicted. He was fingerprinted. His home was searched - even his wife's personal belongings examined during the Mar-a-Lago raid.
Supporters saw the spectacle firsthand.
When no comparable accountability appears on the other side, restraint can easily be interpreted as protection rather than prudence.
Patel may believe the FBI must first be stabilized before it can be transformed. Internal reforms, new investigative standards, and rebuilding institutional credibility may matter more than prosecutions that look backward.
That approach may be prudent. But it is not what many voters expected.
In politics, timing matters.
If Republicans lose control of Congress in the midterm elections, many investigative efforts will stall. Should the White House change hands in 2028, the likelihood of additional disclosures would disappear entirely.
Files will be sealed. Witnesses will fade from public view. Political priorities will shift.
History shows that Washington has an extraordinary ability to bury uncomfortable truths beneath layers of bureaucracy.
And once buried deeply enough, they rarely reemerge.
The Rasmussen numbers should be viewed less as a verdict on Kash Patel than as a warning flare. Trump supporters elevated him precisely because they believed he understood how federal power had been misused. If accountability never arrives, voters may conclude that the system cannot be reformed from within.
For millions of Americans who spent years watching investigations aimed at one side of the political aisle, the question is becoming unavoidable.
If the swamp was supposed to be drained, why does it still look so healthy?
This article was originally published on American Thinker.
Brian C. Joondeph, M.D. is a Colorado ophthalmologist who writes frequently about medicine, science, and public policy.