President Biden's reported planned demotion of acting Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives Director Marvin Richardson is all about midterm politics, former CIA analyst Buck Sexton told Fox News.

On "Jesse Watters Primetime," guest host Jeanine Pirro noted Biden's previous bid to supplant Richardson with gun control activist David Chipman failed after the nominee was unable to garner sufficient senatorial support. 

Despite his 30 years with the ATF, Richardson soured White House sentiment when he appeared at a gun trade show earlier in 2022, she added.

In that regard, Richardson is being demoted to deputy director as Ohio prosecutor Steven Dettelbach's confirmation to the permanent role winds through the Senate.

BIDEN TO TAP ARIZONA'S GARY RESTAINO AS INTERIM ATF DIRECTOR

U.S. Attorney Steven Dettelbach, center, holds up the settlement agreement with the City of Cleveland as he speaks at a news conference Tuesday, May 26, 2015, in Cleveland. Cleveland agreed to overhaul its police department under the supervision of a federal monitor in a settlement announced Tuesday with the U.S. Department of Justice over a pattern of excessive force and other abuses by officers. The announcement comes three days after a white patrolman was acquitted of voluntary manslaughter charges in the shooting deaths of two unarmed black suspects in a 137-shot barrage of police gunfire following a high-speed chase. The case helped prompt an 18-month investigation by the Justice Department. Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson, left, and Vanita Gupta, head of civil rights division at the Department of Justice, right, listen. (AP Photo/Tony Dejak)

Steven Dettelbach (The Associated Press)

"The administration that claims to value ‘diversity’ is passing on appointing a qualified Black man," Pirro told Sexton, co-host of the "Clay Travis & Buck Sexton Show."

"It's all about the politics of a midyear election," he replied. 

"What you see here is the Biden administration wants someone running the ATF who is going to give them the soundbites — talking points that they want to make it seem like they're taking action on crime in general, more specifically on gun control issues."

Sexton said their overt politicization makes their claims about fighting crime "unserious" — evinced through their targeting of "ghost guns" instead of far-left prosecutors.

BIDEN ATF PICK DETTELBACH FACES HIGH-STAKES SENATE CONFIRMATION

Marvin Richardson (Jesse Watters Primetime/Fox News)

Because admitting to lax criminal justice policies is untenable, Biden will blame "ghost guns" and seek politically aligned nominees, he added.

"Let's say they get the ATF director they already discussed — they'd have somebody who would be taking a very adversarial position against gun owners in general, which is what they [and] all these left-wing, anti–Second Amendment groups want to see happen."

Without something like ATF action they can point to and claim to be taking action, Democrats risk being "wiped out" in the midterms because of inflation, the energy crisis and border catastrophe, Sexton concluded.

An NRA spokesperson told Fox News Steven Dettelbach's nomination is a "rinse and repeat" of the activist Chipman — although Dettelbach enjoys some bipartisan support.