Trump
Backs Off Plan for $1.8 Billion Fund That Drew Political Backlash
The fund
has drawn backlash from critics who said it was a scheme to reward President
Trump’s political allies with public benefits.
Tyler
Pager Maggie
Haberman Alan Feuer Devlin Barrett Annie Karni
By Tyler
PagerMaggie HabermanAlan FeuerDevlin Barrett and Annie Karni
June 1,
2026
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/01/us/politics/trump-drop-weaponization-fund.html
President
Trump is backing off his plan to establish a $1.8 billion fund to compensate
people who claimed they were victims of unfair prosecution by the government,
two people familiar with the matter said on Monday.
The
people, who spoke on condition of anonymity to describe the president’s
thinking, said he had been leaning for days toward scrapping the fund, which
critics have characterized as a scheme to reward Mr. Trump’s political allies
with public benefits.
The
administration signaled a retreat on Monday, when the Justice Department said
in a statement that it would abide by a federal judge’s temporary order not to
proceed with any steps to activate the fund until at least June 12, when a
hearing on the fund is scheduled. The department said the administration
disagreed with the decision but did not make clear whether it intended to fight
the issue further in court.
It was
unclear whether getting rid of the fund would affect another part of the legal
settlement in the case, which provides Mr. Trump, his family and his businesses
with significant immunity from audits.
Still,
some administration officials privately expressed relief that the judge’s
ruling showed a way out of what most had seen as a mess of the Trump team’s own
making. But as with all things involving Mr. Trump, he could still decide to
reverse course, especially as he tracks media coverage of his decision.
The
decision by Mr. Trump to back down — at least for now — came after rare
pushback from members of his own party, who normally fall in line behind him.
Still, Republicans on Monday cast serious doubt on whether the president would
ultimately be willing to kill off the fund, which likely would have distributed
huge sums to Mr. Trump’s allies, suggesting they needed firmer assurances that
he would follow through.
The
Justice Department statement might not be “sufficient to satisfy a number of”
G.O.P. senators, said Senator John Thune, Republican of South Dakota and the
majority leader, who said his party was still “sorting through” a way to move
forward. Asked whether he worried that Mr. Trump might veto a bill to rein the
fund, he responded: “Oh yeah. Don’t you?”
The White
House referred to the Justice Department’s statement that it would abide by the
temporary order.
The fund
emerged as part of a deal the Justice Department brokered over Mr. Trump’s $10
billion lawsuit against the I.R.S., blaming it for the leak of his tax returns
during his first term as president. The Biden administration then prosecuted
the man responsible, and Mr. Trump filed the lawsuit in January.
Beyond
the legal challenges, Mr. Trump has also faced increasing pressure from both
parties on Capitol Hill to torpedo the fund. It was so appalling to Senate
Republicans that last month they abruptly abandoned their plans to take up a
filibuster-proof bill to fund the president’s immigration crackdown rather than
advance Mr. Trump’s personal agenda and take what would have been a politically
toxic vote.
Last
month, Todd Blanche, the acting attorney general, appeared on Capitol Hill to
meet with Senate Republicans and explain the fund in a two-hour, closed-door
meeting that turned highly contentious. Senators vented that he had provided
them with no explanations of how the fund would function or whether there would
be any guardrails around the money.
The
impasse was part of a broader split between Mr. Trump and Senate Republicans,
who for most of the year have stood by him and his agenda, even as he has
intervened in G.O.P. primaries in ways that could threaten Republican control
of Congress in November.
The fund
suffered a major legal setback on Friday when, in a surprise move, Judge
Kathleen M. Williams, who oversaw Mr. Trump’s lawsuit against the I.R.S.,
suddenly reopened the case, saying that she wanted to investigate “grievous
allegations” that the hasty deal to resolve it had been “premised on
deception.”
Judge
Williams had always had qualms about the lawsuit, given that Mr. Trump was
suing a federal agency that he controlled and so was effectively on both sides
of the case. And her reason for revisiting the suit was to investigate whether
the president had essentially colluded with his own government to settle the
case “to avoid judicial scrutiny.”
That same
day, the compensation fund suffered another blow in the courts, when a federal
judge in Alexandria, Va., put it on hold altogether until she could consider
its underlying merits at a hearing scheduled for June 12.
The deal
establishing the compensation fund had been negotiated by senior Justice
Department officials — chief among them Trent McCotter, the principal associate
deputy attorney general — and a small group of lawyers representing Mr. Trump,
including Boris Epshteyn, his top outside legal adviser. The talks took place
under significant pressure from a federal judge who had given the Justice
Department until May 20 to tell her whether — and how — it planned to muster an
independent defense of the I.R.S. against the man who ultimately controlled the
agency.
That
deadline set off a scramble as Mr. Trump’s lawyers and the Justice Department
looked for a way to settle the suit and avoid further scrutiny from the judge.
It put the Justice Department in an especially tight spot: Department leaders
did not want to go into court and fight the suit, as they normally would, but
they also did not want to settle it by paying Mr. Trump directly, concerned
that such a move would be politically damaging.
In the
end, they came up with a Plan B, establishing the so-called Anti-Weaponization
Fund to make payments to Trump allies and supporters who claimed they had been
wronged in the courts by the Biden administration. It would draw from the
Judgment Fund, an unlimited source of money that Congress authorized the
Justice Department to use to settle lawsuits filed against the federal
government. If Mr. Trump does fully abandon his fund, there are still other
possible avenues for his allies to seek restitution from the government for
what they claim is weaponization. They could file individual lawsuits or
administrative claims asking for money, which the government could simply agree
to settle one by one.
In March,
for example, the Justice Department agreed to pay $1.25 million to Michael T.
Flynn, Mr. Trump’s former national security adviser, to settle claims that he
was wrongfully prosecuted for making false statements to federal agents
investigating ties between Russia and Mr. Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign.
(He pleaded guilty to lying in the case, but was pardoned by Mr. Trump near the
end of his first term.) Several Jan. 6 rioters, including members of the
far-right group the Proud Boys prosecuted on charges of seditious conspiracy,
have also sued the department for claims of prosecutorial misconduct.
Even if
Mr. Trump moves forward with abandoning the fund, Democrats on Capitol Hill are
signaling they still plan to corner Republicans into taking votes related to
the fund.
On
Monday, Senator Chuck Schumer, Democrat of New York and minority leader, kicked
off the week noting that Senate Democrats were launching a coordinated effort
to “kill the slush fund.”
“If
Republicans return to reconciliation, we will be ready with amendments to shut
the fund down,” Mr. Schumer wrote in a letter to Senate Democrats. “If they try
to bury the issue, we will force them to the Senate floor. If they try to sneak
behind appropriations, we will fight them there too.”
And three
Democratic senators, Adam B. Schiff of California, Mark Kelly of Arizona and
Elissa Slotkin of Michigan, introduced legislation to shut down the fund as
well as any other attempt that they viewed as an abuse of the Judgment Fund.
Republicans
said they were looking for a concrete commitment from Mr. Trump to eliminate
the fund.
Senator
John Kennedy, Republican of Louisiana, told reporters on Monday that the Trump
administration should clearly state that it was giving up on the $1.8 billion
fund if it had changed its position.
“Saying
you’re going to follow a court order doesn’t tell me anything,” he told
reporters. “You have to follow the court order.”
Minho Kim
contributed reporting.
Tyler
Pager is a White House correspondent for The Times, covering President Trump
and his administration.
Maggie
Haberman is a White House correspondent for The Times, reporting on President
Trump.
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.
Devlin
Barrett covers the Justice Department and the F.B.I. for The Times.
Annie
Karni is a congressional correspondent for The Times.


Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário