Trump’s $1.8-billion fund unravels amid court setbacks, bipartisan pushback
WASHINGTONΒ βΒ The Trump administration is backing away from plans to create a $1.8-billion fund to compensate people who claim the government was weaponized against them, a retreat that comes amid a cascade of legal setbacks and a revolt within members of the Republican Party.
But Senate Democrats say the concession is not enough, and are pushing legislation to ensure no president can ever attempt the creation of such a fund again.
βIf Republicans are serious about ending this brazenly corrupt scheme, they should have no problem voting for legislation banning any president from creating such a slush fund in the future,β Sen. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) wrote Monday in a post on X.
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) added that Democrats plan to force a vote on a measure to ensure that Trump and Republicans are βtruly abandoning this corrupt scheme.β
βTrumpβs word is nowhere near enough,β Schumer wrote on X. Earlier in the day, Schumer vowed to force a floor vote to make Republican lawmakers take a public stance on the issue.
Schiff, along with Sens. Mark Kelly of Arizona and Elissa Slotkin of Michigan, introduced the βDrain the Slush Fund Actβ on Monday. The bill, if approved, would bar any payout arising from a lawsuit filed by a president or vice president, language that is designed to permanently foreclose the fund, or anything like it, from being put in place by a future administration.
The White House did not comment on the presidentβs thinking. But in a statement, the Department of Justice said the decision to scrap the fund was in response to a federal judgeβs ruling last week that temporarily blocked payouts from the fund while legal challenges remain pending. The department said it βdisagrees stronglyβ with the move, but stopped short of saying it would challenge the decision.
βThis fund was open to anybody who was so weaponized, targeted, or persecuted, whether they were Democrat, Republican, Conservative, Independent, or otherwise,β the statement read. βThe Department will abide by the Courtβs ruling.β
U.S. District Judge Leonie Brinkema, who was nominated to the bench by President Clinton, a Democrat, has scheduled a June 12 hearing for argument on whether to extend the order blocking the fund.
While the court ruling is not permanent, the unraveling over the fund is a notable defeat for Trump, who has cast it as a long-overdue reckoning for Americans he says were targeted by βan evil, corrupt and weaponized Biden administration.β For Republicans who publicly criticized the fund, it may come as a relief as the concept had been widely seen as a political liability heading into the midterm elections.
The Department of Justice created the fund to settle a lawsuit Trump personally brought against the Internal Revenue Service over the leak of his tax returns. The settlement also includes a clause permanently barring the IRS from pursuing any tax claims against Trump and his businesses that were filed before May 19 β a provision that, according to an analysis by Forbes, would save Trump and his family more than $600 million.
The White House declined to comment on whether the administration would also make changes to the tax immunity clause. The Democratsβ bill does not address that provision.
βCongress doesnβt need to pass a law to remind the Acting Attorney General [Todd Blanche] that he doesnβt have the authority to grant a blanket pardon for tax crimes by the president, much less when the AG is his personal attorney,β a Schiff spokesperson said in a statement. βThe attempt at IRS immunity is corrupt and undoubtedly illegal β and we look forward to seeing it exposed as a fraud.β
Beyond Trumpβs own legal disputes with the IRS, the fund was structured to accept claims from anyone who said they had been targeted by the government, a category the administration made clear could include those who were convicted for attacking the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.
Trump pardoned and commuted the prison sentences of 1,500 people who were charged in connection with the attack, and neither he nor Vice President JD Vance ruled out the possibility that those individuals would be able to receive money from the fund.
That possibility immediately ran into trouble with lawmakers. Senate Republicans, many of whom were caught off guard by the arrangement, publicly revolted against the fund and derailed plans to vote on legislation to fund Trumpβs immigration crackdown amid the deep disagreement.
A closed-door meeting last month between Blanche and GOP senators grew heated, with lawmakers demanding answers the administration was seemingly not prepared to give.
Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas), who attended the meeting, described it as βangryβ in an episode of his podcast last month. Cruz said that roughly 45 Senate Republicans had attended and estimated that βat least half of them were blasting the attorney general.β Based on those reactions, Cruz predicted the administration would need to amend its position on the fund.
βWe will see the administration announcing at a minimum a modification of this, because if they donβt theyβve got a full-on revolt in the Senate,β he said.
The fund also led to criticism outside of Congress. Former Vice President Mike Pence, who served in Trumpβs first administration, told NBC News in an interview Sunday that it was a βbad idea from the start.β
βI would encourage the administration just to drop it,β Pence said.