Dancing for Zion: Leo Terrell

The political shapeshifter running the Trump administration antisemitism campus crackdown.
Leo James Terrell built his identity around the Democratic Party for most of his adult life before declaring in 2020 that he had always belonged on the other side. Today he directs the Trump administration’s scorched-earth campaign against American universities, wielding the threat to “bankrupt” any institution he believes has allowed antisemitism to fester.
His journey from civil rights attorney to MAGA enforcer represents a political transformation so thorough that Terrell himself turned it into a marketing strategy. The new version has a name: “Leo 2.0.”
Born February 1, 1955 in Los Angeles, Terrell graduated from Gardena High School in the Harbor Gateway neighborhood in 1972, where his classmates elected him student body president. He took his bachelor’s degree from California State University Dominguez Hills in 1977, added a master’s in education from Pepperdine University, and completed his law degree at UCLA School of Law before joining the California Bar on December 4, 1990.
He spent years in the classroom before he ever entered a courtroom, teaching history, geography, and economics at Gage Middle School in Huntington Park. He once remarked that he considers himself “a better teacher than a lawyer.” Donald Trump nominated him on January 21, 2025 as Senior Counsel to the Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Rights Division.
With his bar card in hand, Terrell set up a civil rights practice out of a Beverly Hills tower at 8383 Wilshire Boulevard. He joined the NAACP in 1990 and took on pro bono work for the organization until a public break in 2003, when he resigned accusing the group of pressuring him over his endorsement of a Republican judicial nominee. NAACP Washington director Hilary Shelton pushed back: “not an NAACP lawyer, not even a former NAACP lawyer…he’s done volunteer work for us, which we appreciate.”
National visibility arrived through his friendship with O.J. Simpson, whose criminal and civil trials he watched and publicly supported as a family friend and legal analyst. He then co-hosted the Los Angeles radio program Terrell and Katz alongside conservative former judge Burton Katz, premiering on June 3, 1996 on KMPC, before graduating to a regular presence on Fox News programs including Hannity, The O’Reilly Factor, and Hannity and Colmes, where he served as the liberal foil. He also turned up on Nightline, Larry King Live, Today, and Good Morning America.
A joint investigation by ProPublica and the Chronicle of Higher Education concluded that Terrell’s actual legal career was “dramatically at odds” with Trump’s portrait of a “highly respected” attorney with an “incredibly successful career.” Lawyers who worked in the same world dismissed him as peripheral. Connie Rice, former western regional counsel for the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, recalled that Terrell “was never at the table for the big cases that made impact. He loved holding press conferences.” Carl Douglas, a member of the Simpson defense team, put it more bluntly: “Leo was always a talker,” not “a baller.”
The paper trail told a similar story. Terrell faced two malpractice suits after accepting settlements without his clients’ knowledge. A federal appeals court characterized his management of the Edmond Logan criminal matter as “woeful,” and U.S. District Judge Paul Maloney wrote in 2017 that Terrell delivered “abysmal advice” that pushed Logan to turn down a plea deal and land a 35-year sentence.
His finances told the same story. The IRS filed 11 liens against him between 2004 and 2015, totaling nearly $400,000 in unpaid taxes. He sought Chapter 7 bankruptcy protection in October 2010, disclosing $736,938 in liabilities, $304,650 in assets, and monthly income of $4,000, before the case was dismissed when he stopped attending required creditor meetings. More than a dozen small businesses took him to court seeking more than $170,000 in unpaid bills. His condominium went into foreclosure in 2013. When he filed his DOJ financial disclosure with $92,000 still owed to the IRS, he listed his liabilities as “none.”
The break came in July 2020. Terrell went on Fox News and announced he would cast his first-ever Republican ballot, pointing to Black Lives Matter’s grip on the Democratic Party, the push to defund police departments, and what he described as Biden’s condescending assumption that Black voters had nowhere else to go. He reinvented himself as “Leo 2.0,” moved red Trump-branded caps online, and landed a six-figure Fox News contributor contract.
The October 7 Hamas attacks gave Terrell a cause with a sharper edge. He declared that “No Jewish American in his or her right mind should vote Democrat,” trained his criticism on Black Lives Matter over antisemitism, and after October 7 compared the organization to ISIS.
The passion Terrell now brings to fighting antisemitism stands in sharp contrast to a history of near-total absence from the cause. ProPublica’s investigation concluded that before his MAGA conversion, Terrell had “little previous engagement with Jewish causes.” Jewish Insider noted in February 2025 that “Terrell does not have many connections to advocates in the Jewish community who work on the issue,” and seasoned antisemitism activist Ken Marcus said he had “never met Terrell.” In any substantive sense, his involvement with Jewish causes began only around 2020 and deepened through 2023 before reaching full intensity with his government appointment in early 2025.
That appointment positioned him as chair of the Department of Justice’s Task Force to Combat Antisemitism starting in February 2025. Pro-Israel institutions wasted little time in embracing him. Zionist Organization of America president Morton Klein proclaimed that “Leo Terrell will go down in history as one of the best friends the Jewish people ever had.”
Awards from organized Jewry soon followed. On January 25, 2026, Aish bestowed its King David Award on Terrell at the Dan Family Aish World Center in Jerusalem, citing his work defending Jewish students and the State of Israel. The Israeli government added its own tribute, conferring the Beacon of Truth Award for the Fight Against Antisemitism at a separate Jerusalem ceremony that praised his “moral clarity” and “tangible, on-the-ground impact.”
In office, Terrell has governed the way he argued on television. Appearing on Fox’s Life, Liberty and Levin, he vowed that “We are going to bankrupt these universities. We are going to take away every single federal dollar,” and added the direct threat: “If these universities do not play ball, lawyer up, because the federal government is coming after you.”
Columbia absorbed the opening blow, which consisted of an immediate cancellation of approximately $400 million in federal grants and contracts, which the task force described as the opening salvo.
Terrell announced in a press release on March 7, 2025 that “Canceling these taxpayer funds is our strongest signal yet… This is only the beginning,” and when reports emerged in July 2025 that a settlement might be in reach, he shut the door publicly: “I will not ‘SELLOUT’ Jewish Americans. NO DEALS!”
Harvard became the next target. On March 31, 2025, the task force notified Harvard that it was reviewing more than $8.7 billion in federal grants across the university and its hospital affiliates. Days later the administration moved to freeze $2.2 billion in grants and $60 million in contracts. Harvard sued in federal court, and in September 2025 U.S. District Judge Allison D. Burroughs issued an 84-page ruling ordering the administration to restore the frozen funds.
Burroughs wrote that “there is, in reality, little connection between the research affected by the grant terminations and antisemitism” and that “defendants used antisemitism as a smokescreen for a targeted, ideologically-motivated assault on this country’s premier universities” in violation of the First Amendment and due process protections. The Trump administration appealed in December 2025, sending the case to the First Circuit Court of Appeals in Boston.
Rather than retreating after the legal setback, Terrell vowed to expand the offensive nationwide. Terrell mapped out an aggressive national expansion, promising he expects “massive lawsuits” against “Jew-hating” universities, which includes Harvard, the University of California, Los Angeles, among others. On the question of international students, he drew a hard line on Israeli media outlet N12: “We will chase after the campus inciters, and those that are here with a student visa — goodbye. You are here by grace, if you create a mess, crime or discrimination against Jews, you will find yourself outside.
In 2026, Terrell unveiled a 15-city National Awareness and Action Tour alongside a new civilian Antisemitism Advisory Committee and a “social media alert system” built to “expose and shame cities that fail to take action.” He was emphatic that the committee would not be one “that’s going to write a report that collects dust,” describing it as a vehicle for on-the-ground solutions at the local level where, he argued, most official inaction on antisemitism occurs.
The posture stands in striking contrast to a January 2020 version of Leo Terrell who held Trump personally responsible for a surge in antisemitic violence. For someone whose conversion to the cause traces in any meaningful way only to 2020, the material returns have been considerable. His government salary is $167,603. His speaking fees run between $50,000 and $100,000. His personal X account has roughly 2.6 million followers. And the awards from pro-Israel organizations show no sign of stopping.
Rather than reading his transformation as a change of heart, look at the bottom line. Terrell is simply buck-dancing to secure his next round of shekels from the pan-Judah.
https://www.josealnino.org/p/buck-dancing-for-zion-leo-terrell