quarta-feira, 3 de junho de 2026
Order Shielding Trump Family From I.R.S. Audits Will Remain, Blanche Says
Order
Shielding Trump Family From I.R.S. Audits Will Remain, Blanche Says
The
acting attorney general said the administration was preserving a broad order
protecting the president and his family from audits of already filed returns,
despite dropping a $1.8 billion payout fund.
Andrew
DuehrenAlan Feuer
By Andrew
Duehren and Alan Feuer
June 2,
2026
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/02/us/politics/trump-irs-settlement.html
The
Justice Department is standing by an extraordinary measure giving President
Trump, his family and his businesses potentially lucrative protection from
I.R.S. investigations, Todd Blanche, the acting attorney general, said on
Tuesday.
Mr.
Blanche’s remarks about the tax protections came during an appearance in front
of a House Appropriations subcommittee, in which he told lawmakers that the
Trump administration was abandoning a related plan to create a $1.8 billion
fund to pay restitution to people who claimed they were victims of government
“weaponization.”
Mr.
Blanche said the end of the fund would not affect the separate agreement
shielding Mr. Trump from audits of tax returns he and his family had already
filed. Both proposals had emerged in recent weeks as part of a settlement of
Mr. Trump’s $10 billion lawsuit against the I.R.S. But now only the measure
benefiting the Trumps will survive, Mr. Blanche said.
“Nothing
has changed with that,” he said, referring to the tax proposal. “We’re not
moving forward with the anti-weaponization fund.”
Mr.
Blanche’s directive left in place a staggering public benefit to a president
who has sought to bend the government toward his own financial interests. A
host of thorny legal questions also remain.
Mr. Trump’s lawsuit against the I.R.S. was revived last week by a judge
concerned about potential deception in the agreement to withdraw the suit and
to release the Trumps from any ongoing audits.
These
protections could be immensely valuable to Mr. Trump and his family, who have
faced repeated audits from the Internal Revenue Service. Just one investigation
by the I.R.S. stemmed in part from how Mr. Trump claimed losses on his Chicago
tower could have cost him more than $100 million, The New York Times has
reported. The Trump Organization had recently entered settlement talks with the
I.R.S. to try to resolve the audit, The Times previously reported.
Tax
lawyers and former I.R.S. officials have said that the protection for Mr. Trump
was unprecedented in its scope and form, particularly since it extends to
“affiliates” of the Trumps. Pre-existing I.R.S. procedure has been to audit the
president every year, rather than confer on him sweeping protection from
scrutiny on tax returns already filed.
Mr.
Blanche sought to cast the audit protections as a typical outcome of litigation
against the I.R.S. But Mr. Trump’s lawsuit against the agency did not deal with
an audit or tax issue, instead focusing on the leak of his tax returns by a
former I.R.S. contractor during his first term.
Indeed,
when the tax proposal was first floated to the Justice Department last month,
lawyers there raised questions about whether giving the Trumps protection
against I.R.S. scrutiny would run afoul of a law barring the tax agency from
dropping audits at the direction of the president or his aides.
The
I.R.S. also sought to contest Mr. Trump’s lawsuit, with lawyers at the agency
preparing a 25-page memorandum recommending that the Justice Department move to
dismiss the case.
“Like
anytime the I.R.S. settles with an individual taxpayer or another company, as
part of the settlement, it’s standard, it’s typical to get rid of past ongoing
audits,” Mr. Blanche said. “It’s not a forward-looking document. It’s nothing
that gives any sort of immunity in the future to the president or his family or
his organizations.”
Mr.
Blanche personally signed the document conferring tax protections for Mr.
Trump, his family and businesses. The brief agreement was posted without
fanfare on the Justice Department’s website on May 19, one day after the
agreement setting up the anti-weaponization fund was released. Some lawyers
have questioned whether Mr. Blanche, as the acting attorney general, even has
the authority to order the I.R.S., a separate agency, to stop civil tax audits.
Representative
Rosa DeLauro, Democrat of Connecticut, said at the hearing on Tuesday that the
I.R.S. order proved that Mr. Blanche was continuing to act as Mr. Trump’s
personal lawyer. “Do you not find there’s any conflict of interest in what you
are doing here as the acting attorney general of the United States?” she asked.
Mr. Blanche said there was none.
While
Senate Republicans had loudly protested the $1.8 billion fund, spurring Mr.
Blanche’s retreat on that provision, many have appeared to look the other way
at the audit protection, a benefit for the president potentially worth tens of
millions of dollars.
“I
haven’t been focused on that to tell the truth,” said Senator Susan Collins,
Republican of Maine. “I think the same rules should apply to everybody.”
Still,
Senate Democrats have said they plan to try to force votes on both the $1.8
billion fund and the audit provision. Republicans are taking up a bill funding
immigration enforcement efforts under a fast-track process that allows
Democrats to introduce amendments.
At least
one Senate Republican, Thom Tillis of North Carolina, has been critical of the
audit immunity.
“How can
you not at least have them be subject to the same thing that I’m subjected to,
and every one of you?” he said on Tuesday.
Andrew
Duehren covers tax policy for The Times from Washington.
Alan
Feuer covers extremism and political violence for The Times, focusing on the
criminal cases involving the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol and against former
President Donald J. Trump.
Blanche Says Justice Dept. Won’t Proceed With Trump’s $1.8 Billion Fund
Blanche
Says Justice Dept. Won’t Proceed With Trump’s $1.8 Billion Fund
The
acting attorney general told lawmakers that he would leave in place an order
forcing the I.R.S. to drop investigations into President Trump, his family and
his businesses.
Glenn
Thrush Alan
Feuer
By Glenn
Thrush and Alan Feuer
June 2,
2026
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/02/us/politics/todd-blanche-house-hearing.html
Todd
Blanche, the acting attorney general, said on Tuesday he was withdrawing a
proposal to create a $1.8 billion fund to compensate people claiming to be
victims of unfair prosecution, amid a revolt among Republicans who saw it as an
ethical and political disaster.
“We’re
not moving forward with the fund, period,” Mr. Blanche told members of a House
Appropriations subcommittee. He repeated himself to make clear that he meant
the fund proposal would be permanently withdrawn.
His
statement could break an impasse with Senate Republicans, who had demanded the
fund be scrapped as a precondition for passing a major immigration enforcement
bill. Opponents had described the proposal as a slush fund for allies of
President Trump.
But Mr.
Blanche said he would leave in place an order he signed last month that would,
in effect, block the I.R.S. from investigating Mr. Trump, his family and his
businesses for existing tax violations.
“Nothing
has changed with that,” said Mr. Blanche, who added that the tax order would
not shield Mr. Trump and his associates from future investigations.
Outraged
Democrats accused Mr. Blanche, the president’s former defense lawyer, of
cutting a sweetheart deal that would let the president and his family avoid a
potential $100 million penalty.
“So the
blanket immunity is, is not something that you’re going to move back on?” asked
Representative Rosa DeLauro, Democrat of Connecticut who accused Mr. Blanche of
prioritizing the president’s financial interests over the public good.
“You do
not belong in this job,” she added.
While Mr.
Blanche has now taken the fund off the table, much political damage has already
been done. In addition, the unusually favorable tax deal provides Democrats
with a potentially potent line of attack in the midterm elections — that
Republicans support shielding a billionaire president from tax penalties at a
time when many Americans are struggling financially.
Democrats
repeatedly requested that Mr. Blanche commit to rescind, in writing, his order
creating the payout fund.
“You
started it, you established it in writing, so it just makes sense to rescind it
in writing,” said Representative Grace Meng, Democrat of New York.
“I’m not
committing to put anything in writing,” he said, adding that he would abide by
his word and would take the request under advisement.
The
testimony came a day after the department committed to abiding by a federal
judge’s order pausing the fund’s implementation until at least June 12, a
decision some administration officials privately said could provide an off-ramp
to unwind the plan.
Mr.
Blanche, appearing last month before the Senate Appropriations Committee, had
offered few details about how it would be implemented, and declined to
guarantee that the money would not be doled out to those who ransacked the
Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.
Mr. Trump
had discussed backing off the plan to establish the fund, bankrolled by
taxpayers, which was announced last month immediately after he agreed to settle
a $10 billion lawsuit he had filed against the I.R.S. over the leak of his tax
returns.
Mr.
Blanche has said he did not directly participate in the secretive negotiations
that led to the settlement.
He had
privately expressed concerns about a deal. But he determined that the plan,
created by a subordinate and moved forward by Mr. Trump’s private lawyers,
including Boris Epshteyn, passed legal muster and assented, according to
officials briefed on the talks.
Critics
have accused the acting attorney general, Mr. Trump’s former lead defense
lawyer, of sacrificing his department’s independence to serve a president he
still views as a client.
In a
wide-ranging podcast interview with the Fox News host Sean Hannity released on
Tuesday, a relaxed Mr. Blanche systematically attacked all the prosecutors who
had overseen cases against the president, offering an unapologetic defense of
his pursuit of Mr. Trump’s campaign of retribution.
Mr.
Blanche, ditching his standard suit for a polo shirt, assailed the former
special counsels Robert S. Mueller III and Jack Smith, who had handled federal
investigations into Mr. Trump. Mr. Blanche also attacked state and local
prosecutors, including Alvin L. Bragg, the Manhattan district attorney, and
Letitia James, the New York attorney general, who had pursued cases against Mr.
Trump.
Mr.
Blanche openly talked about the so-called grand conspiracy investigation that
seeks to tie many of those inquiries together in a single purported plot to
deprive Mr. Trump of his rights, breaking sharply with a Justice Department
policy that bars the public discussion of ongoing inquiries, particularly those
involving grand juries.
“There is
a grand conspiracy investigation, correct?” Mr. Hannity asked, in an interview
recorded over the Memorial Day weekend.
“Yes,
absolutely,” Mr. Blanche responded. “One hundred percent.”
Mr.
Blanche then revealed information about two grand juries, which typically sit
in secret, hearing evidence in the case. He agreed with Mr. Hannity that one
had been empaneled in Florida and the second in another state.
Mr.
Blanche even disclosed some targets of the grand conspiracy case by name: James
B. Comey, the former F.B.I. director; John O. Brennan, the former C.I.A.
director; and James R. Clapper Jr., the former director of national
intelligence.
“Let’s
talk about individuals,” Mr. Hannity said. “Comey? Brennan? Clapper?”
“Yeah,”
Mr. Blanche said.
Nonetheless,
Mr. Blanche and other senior officials have tried to blunt Mr. Trump’s attempt
to monetize his grievances by obtaining government compensation for the leak of
his tax returns.
The fund
proposal allowed the president to drop his suit while creating a mechanism to
provide payments to supporters who claimed they were also targeted unfairly.
“What we
did was entirely legal and appropriate,” Mr. Blanche told Mr. Hannity. “And
again, the Trump family gets nothing.”
But that
proposal prompted a revolt among Senate Republicans, some of whom berated Mr.
Blanche during a contentious meeting at the Capitol last month.
On
Monday, the department had signaled that it was re-evaluating the situation,
but stopped short of pulling the plug, saying in a statement that it would
abide by the ruling in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of
Virginia temporarily suspending payouts.
But that
initially did little to ease the concerns of Republican senators, who reacted
with revulsion to a plan they viewed as an ethical minefield and a potential
political liability in midterm elections already made treacherous by Mr.
Trump’s declining popularity.
Democrats
pledged to attach amendments to legislation that would defund the effort,
adding to demands by Republicans for the Trump administration to kill the plan
outright.
Annie
Karni contributed reporting.
A
correction was made on June 2, 2026: An earlier version of this article
misidentified the panel that Todd Blanche, the acting attorney general,
appeared before on Tuesday. It was a House Appropriations subcommittee, not the
House Appropriations Committee.
Glenn
Thrush covers the Department of Justice for The Times and has also written
about gun violence, civil rights and conditions in the country’s jails and
prisons.
Alan
Feuer covers extremism and political violence for The Times, focusing on the
criminal cases involving the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol and against former
President Donald J. Trump.


