National Review Online
Thursday, June 04, 2026
Well, that didn’t take very long. Two weeks after we editorialized against the Trump administration’s $1.776
billion “Anti-Weaponization Fund,” acting Attorney General Todd Blanche told a
House subcommittee hearing that the administration is not going forward with
the fund.
That’s good news. It’s a sign that Senate Republicans in
particular have remembered that they run an independent branch of the federal
government, with its own responsibility to voters and its own duty to uphold
the Constitution and the laws it writes. They should go two steps further: bar
Trump from reviving the idea, and ensure that future presidents are no longer
empowered to engage in similar mischief.
Republicans on the Hill, especially in the Senate, had
concerns from the start about the fund. Its huge and transparently symbolic
price tag was obviously not calibrated to any realistic assessment of the
government’s actual liability for legal wrongs allegedly committed by the Biden
administration. Its December 1, 2028, end date was obviously designed to ensure
that it served the politics of this administration and not its successors.
There were real worries that it would be used not only as a corrupt slush fund
to reward political allies, but specifically to pay off January 6 rioters in
ways that would be both morally wrong and politically embarrassing to
Republicans.
To the extent that there’s an argument for creating new
rights of compensation for government misconduct beyond those already on the
books, that’s the job of Congress. The Senate and House were justifiably
concerned that the fund would be an end run around their powers, and would be
used by Trump and Blanche to redress what they perceive as unfairness and
injustice rather than to pay for violations of established legal rights that
could be proven in court.
It is also heartening to see that the power of the purse
still works. The direct impetus for Blanche’s concession was that he and
Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin were both testifying hat in hand
as Congress considers another bill to fund immigration enforcement. That gave
leverage to the legislative branch that it seems at times to forget that it
has.
The fund was publicly indefensible, and election years
have a way of putting a stop to indefensible things. The closest thing to a
defense of the fund is that prior Democratic administrations have also used
collusive settlements to pay off political allies who did not suffer specific
legal wrongs that could have been proven in court. But that’s just another way
of saying that what is wrong today was wrong before Trump got to town.
Republicans should use the uproar over the Trump fund as
an opportunity and a teaching moment, and pressure Democrats to agree to more
restrictions on the self-licking ice cream cone that is the permanent Judgment
Fund. Critics have long argued that the fund, which pays out claims without
consequence to the budgets of offending agencies and which abdicated
congressional oversight over executive spending on settlements, is ripe for
abuse and offends the proper separation of powers. This would be an excellent
time to fix that.
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