Given the political controversy that has haunted the FBI in recent years, both parties ought to be able to agree on the need for a fresh start and for the bureau’s image to be refocused on the vast majority of its work — on fighting crime and transnational gangs and on preventing terrorism and counterespionage.

The Heritage Foundation’s “Project 2025” blueprint for conservative government argues that “anything other than a top-to-bottom overhaul will only further erode the trust of significant portions of the American people and harm the very fabric that holds together our constitutional republic.” The document urges a return to the FBI’s “focus on its two core functions: protecting public safety and defending the rule of law.”

But the turmoil of recent years has shown that upholding the rule of law is in the eye of the beholder.

There’s no sign that Patel is the kind of apolitical personality who might be able to rid the FBI of partisanship. He’s open about his deeply political motivations, appearing at events like the Conservative Political Action Conference. Although he spent time at the Justice Department investigating terrorism cases and worked on Capitol Hill, his critics argue that his premier qualification for the job, in Trump’s eyes, is in offering total loyalty to the president-elect’s political goals and schemes, which Comey and Wray refused to show.

Patel has vowed a purge of the FBI to root out what he sees as politicization. “We’ve got to put in all-American patriots top to bottom,” Patel said of the DOJ in an interview on Steve Bannon’s podcast, adding that the department under Trump “will go out and find the conspirators, not just in government but in the media.” And he added: “Yes, we’re going to come after the people in the media who lied about American citizens, who helped Joe Biden rig presidential elections — we’re going to come after you.”

Patel also wrote in his book “Government Gangsters: The Deep State, the Truth, and the Battle for Our Democracy” that “the FBI is now the prime functionary of the Deep State. The politicized leadership at the very top has turned it into a tool of surveillance and suppression of American citizens.”

Patel’s warnings suggest that while he wants to end the politicization of the FBI, he’ll likely pursue weaponization of the bureau for different political purposes — namely those set by Trump.

While Patel’s selection was greeted with horror by many outside the MAGA movement and the Republican Party, there’s no sign yet that GOP senators will block his confirmation. Indeed, many Republicans embrace Trump’s view of the FBI as biased against him and view his election win as a mandate for a fundamental gutting of governmental institutions.

And Trump left no doubt about where he sees legal authority resting in his new administration, with a recent comment that sent chills down the spines of those who fear what will happen in the next four years.

“I’m the chief law enforcement officer, you do know that,” he told NBC’s “Meet the Press” in an interview that aired Sunday.

“I’m the president.”