Backlash grows over Trump's $1.8B US 'MAGA slush fund'May 21|Duration 2:29Bipartisan backlash is growing to U.S. President Donald Trump's $1.8 billion US Anti-Weaponization Fund for Trump allies, which some critics call a 'MAGA slush fund.' Senate Republicans revolted by cancelling a planned vote on a major immigration enforcement bill.Opponents of President Donald Trump's sweeping legal settlement with the U.S. Internal Revenue Service will face high hurdles in challenging its $1.776-billion US fund for victims of alleged political "weaponization" and its provision barring audits of his taxes, according to legal experts.Congressional Democrats derided the so-called Anti-Weaponization Fund as a slush fund to steer taxpayer dollars to Trump's political allies, while watchdog groups called the tax immunity agreement illegal. Several Republicans have also expressed concerns about the plan, and met Thursday with Todd Blanche, acting attorney general, to gather more information.Harry Dunn and Daniel Hodges, two police officers who defended the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, against a failed bid by Trump supporters to stop Congress from certifying Democrat Joe Biden's 2020 election victory, have already sued. The officers allege the fund will reward and empower rioters who have harassed them and made death threats.Legal experts said it is unclear whether challengers will be able to block payouts or undo Trump's shield against audits of past taxes if Congress, controlled by Trump's fellow Republicans, stays silent.Todd Blanche grilled over Trump administration's $1.8B Anti-Weaponization FundIn part, that is because Trump dismissed his $10-billion lawsuit against the IRS before the settlement was announced, preventing the judge in that case from doing anything."There's no longer a venue to challenge the legality of this settlement," said Danny Werfel, who served as IRS commissioner during the Biden administration.Proud Boys leader says he'd applyThe Justice Department announced the fund on Monday, shortly after Trump voluntarily withdrew his lawsuit accusing the IRS of wrongdoing in media leaks of his tax returns during his first term as president.Trump — who has said he was only advised of the planned fund last weekend — also dropped claims over the government's investigations of contacts between his 2016 presidential campaign and Russians, and the FBI's 2022 search of his Mar-a-Lago home in Florida for classified documents he retained after his first term ended. Trump will also get an apology under the plan.WATCH | Trump administration on defence as Democrats slam 'slush fund':Trump administration defends $1.8B Anti-Weaponization FundMay 19|Duration 2:07The acting head of the U.S. Justice Department defended a new Anti-Weaponization Fund that would compensate people claiming mistreatment by previous administrations, something critics say is a 'slush fund' to benefit supporters of President Donald Trump.On Tuesday, the Justice Department quietly released an addendum signed that day by Blanche, which "FOREVER BARRED and PRECLUDED" the government from prosecuting or pursuing pending tax claims against Trump, his family and his businesses. The $1.776-billion fund, an apparent nod to the year of the country's founding, will be controlled by allies of the president, who can remove any member of the commission. It will be used to compensate people who claim to have been damaged by U.S. government "weaponization or lawfare." Trump has accused the Biden administration of improperly using law enforcement, intelligence and regulatory agencies to target him and his allies, even as prominent Democrats accused of wrongdoing were also prosecuted during that time.The fund will be financed from the Judgment Fund, which Congress established in 1956 to pay legal claims made against the government. Blanche, a former personal lawyer for Trump between his presidencies, fended off allegations from U.S. senators on Tuesday that he was putting the president's interests above the constitution. Blanche compared the fund to a $680-million fund created in 2010 for Native American farmers during Democratic president Barack Obama's administration to resolve years-long litigation known as the Keepseagle case.🚨BREAKING: RM <a href="https://twitter.com/RepRaskin?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@RepRaskin</a> introduces legislation to BLOCK Trump's efforts to steal $1.8 billion from U.S. taxpayers for a MAGA slush fund. <a href="https://t.co/XfDgU6IpCY">pic.twitter.com/XfDgU6IpCY</a>—HouseJudiciaryDemocratic Sen. Chris Van Hollen of Maryland called that comparison "incredibly deceptive," given it was reviewed and approved by a federal judge. Blanche said the IRS settlement will not undergo court review. Blanche also said Jan. 6 defendants, who have already received clemency from Trump, will be eligible to apply but told CNN in an interview that commissioners would take their underlying conduct into consideration.Enrique Tarrio, the Proud Boys leader sentenced to 22 years for seditious conspiracy over the Jan. 6 riot, told Reuters he planned to apply to the fund, assuming he could get between $2 million and $5 million.Those suing have to demonstrate harmLegal experts said opponents of the $1.776 billion fund will have a difficult time establishing a legal right to sue, known as standing, because it may be tough to demonstrate they have been harmed in some way. The two police officers who sued in federal court in Washington claimed they faced injury because the fund would encourage January 6 defendants to keep threatening them and potentially commit violence."The increased risk of threats, harassment and violence our plaintiffs are suffering as a result confers standing," said Public Integrity Project CEO Brendan Ballou, who filed the lawsuit.Danny Werfel, while serving as Internal Revenue Service commissioner, is shown on May 7, 2024, testifying before Congress in Washington. Werfel said that because there's no longer an outstanding lawsuit before the courts, it may be up to a future presidential administration to unwind the controversial Justice Department fund. (Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)Some experts said the best chance to challenge the fund may come later, when claimants might allege they were harmed because their payouts were too low. Josh Gardner, a lawyer who led the Justice Department's handling of the Keepseagle case, pointed to Hunter Biden, the former president's son who was onvicted of tax and gun crimes during his father's presidency in a case pursued by a Trump-appointed federal prosecutor.President Biden pardoned his son seven weeks before Trump returned to office."If Hunter Biden were to submit a claim and his claim were rejected, he would have standing to challenge not just his denial, but I think the entire structure of this settlement," Gardner said.If litigants establish standing, they could argue that the IRS settlement violates several laws, according to legal experts.AnalysisCountries have gotten results after enriching the Trumps. Could Canada do the same?Biden's pardon of son sets precedent that could sting DemocratsOne issue is whether the fund violates the U.S. Constitution's Appropriations Clause, which gives Congress power of the purse, because U.S. lawmakers did not authorize it. Ninety-three Democratic lawmakers filed a legal brief making that very point shortly after Trump dismissed his lawsuit but before the judge formally closed the case. LISTEN | Pod Save America's Tommy Vietor on why Trump family corruption allegations persist:Front Burner26:06Trump & corruption with Pod Save AmericaThere is also the question of whether Trump's tax immunity provision violates a U.S. law that protects against political interference in taxpayer audits.Werfel, the former IRS commissioner, added that future administrations often unwind non-legislative actions of prior administrations.Some experts said one or both chambers of Congress, though not individual lawmakers, could challenge the fund. That is unlikely for now, with Republicans controlling the House of Representatives and Senate.
IRS settlement preventing Trump-related audits, controversial fund tough to challenge in court, experts say | CBC News
Opponents of President Donald Trump's sweeping legal settlement with the U.S. Internal Revenue Service will face high hurdles in challenging its $1.776-billion US fund for victims of alleged political "weaponization" and its provision barring audits of his taxes, according to legal experts.











