Bannon tells GOP: ‘Seize the institutions’ of government now or we’re 'going to prison’ after 2028
Bannon tells GOP: ‘Seize the institutions’ of government now or we’re 'going to prison’ after 2028
Jon Queally

Bannon tells GOP: ‘Seize the institutions’ of government now or we’re 'going to prison’ after 2028

“Steve Bannon motivating Democratic voters,” said one historian in response to comments by the former Trump White House adviser.

Far-right podcaster and former top presidential adviser Steve Bannon told a crowd of aspiring conservative staffers on Capitol Hill this week that the job of  Republicans between now and the midterm election next year is to seize complete control of government institutions and turn as many of President Donald Trump’s executive orders as possible into law as a way to avoid political defeat in the coming years and, ultimately, keep MAGA loyalists from being tried and sent to jail.

“I’ll tell you right, as God as my witness, if we lose the midterms and we lose 2028, some in this room are going to prison,” Bannon told the crowd on Wednesday at an awards event hosted by the Conservative Partnership Academy. This group offers training and certifications to aspiring right-wing ideologues working in politics and government.

Bannon, who has already served time in prison for refusing to submit to a Congressional subpoena related to his role as a top aide to Trump during his first term, included himself among those who might be targeted if Republicans lost power.

In his remarks, Bannon said Tuesday’s election results in  New York CityVirginiaNew Jersey and elsewhere — where Democrats swept the GOP — should be seen as a warning to Trump’s MAGA base, but called for an intensification of the agenda, not a retreat.

“They’re not gonna stop,” Bannon said of Democrats and  progressives aligned against Trump’s authoritarian push and Republican economic policies that have focused on lavishing ever-larger  tax cuts for corporations and the rich while gutting government programs, including cuts to  Medicaidfood assistance for the poor, devastating environmental policies, and dismantling of  healthcare subsidies leading to a surge in monthly premiums for millions of families.

Trump’s opponents, warned Bannon, are “getting more and more and more radical, and we have to counter that".

His advice to Republicans in power and the right-wing movement that supports them is to counter “with more intense action” and more “urgency” before it’s too late. “We’re burning daylight,” Bannon said. “We have to codify what Trump has done by executive order.”

In what seemed like a reference to Trump’s recent talk of going “nuclear” on the  filibuster in the  US Senate and other efforts, Bannon said, “We have to get beyond these structural barriers” in  Washington, DC, that he believes are hindering the president from consolidating his power even further.

About discussions behind the scenes, Bannon said he has been in touch with Republicans in the Senate who he says are asking him to go through for them what he means and that in the coming days people may be surprised by who “in the conservative movement” are coming around to his thinking, mentioning “institutionalists” like Sens. Josh Hawley of Missouri and  Lindsey Graham of  South Carolina, as those he’s been speaking with.

“These are what I would call heavy-hitters on the limited-government constitutionalists, in our movement,” Bannon said of other unnamed individuals, “and they’re about to come out in the next couple of days and make this argument because I said, ‘Look, we have to understand that if we don’t this to the maximum — the maximalist strategy — now, with a sense of urgency, and in doing this, seize the institutions… if we don’t do this now, we’re going to lose this chance forever, because you’re never going to have another Trump”.

In an interview with Politico following Tuesday’s elections, Bannon said the win by democratic socialist  Zohran Mamdani to become New York City’s next mayor “should be a wake-up call” to Trump’s right-wing nationalist movement. “These are very serious people,” Bannon said of Mamdani and others who support his affordability agenda that focuses on the needs of working people, “and they need to be addressed seriously.”

As such, Bannon called for the Justice Department, the State Department, and the Department of Homeland Security to target Mamdani, specifically by going after his US citizenship and calling for him to be deported. Mamdani is a naturalised US citizen who came to the US with his parents when he was seven years old.

As the video clip of Bannon’s remarks about jail time if the Republicans lose in the upcoming elections made the rounds online on Thursday, reactions were predictable along partisan lines.

“Steve Bannon motivating Democratic voters,”  said Aviel Roshwald, a Georgetown University professor of history with a focus on nationalist movements.

Bannon’s call for “seizing the institutions” has been a mainstay on his popular War Room podcast for months, but critics warn that his open embrace of the demand should not make it any less shocking or worrisome.

“He’s preparing his audience to see violence and institutional takeover as ‘necessary’. And he’s counting on Democrats and independents being too divided or too polite to call it what it is,” warned Christopher Webb, a left-leaning political writer on his Substack page last month.

Bannon and his allies, continued Webb, “do not give a damn about the law, the Constitution, or  democracy. They only care about control. And if we keep treating their words as ‘just talk,’ it will be too late when it stops being talk".

He concluded: “This isn’t going to end well.”

 

Republished from Common Dreams, 7 November 2025

 

The views expressed in this article may or may not reflect those of Pearls and Irritations.

Jon Queally