President Donald Trump has agreed to allocate $1.776 billion in taxpayer funds to an "Anti-Weaponization Fund" designed to compensate individuals who claim they were politically targeted by the government, according to axios.com. This fund stems from a settlement of a lawsuit Trump filed against the IRS and Treasury over a 2019 tax return leak.
The fund was created following Trump’s January lawsuit demanding $10 billion for the leak of his tax returns. The settlement includes a formal apology to Trump, his sons, and the Trump Organization, bars the IRS from auditing Trump’s past tax returns, and establishes the Anti-Weaponization Fund through the Treasury Department’s Judgment Fund. Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche, who was Trump’s former criminal defense lawyer, will appoint a five-member commission to decide who receives payouts from the fund. These decisions are final and cannot be appealed or challenged in court. The fund will operate until December 2028 and is allowed to cover its own administrative costs, though there is no disclosed cap on these expenses.
This fund represents a unique government program converting a personal legal settlement into a public compensation mechanism with limited transparency. It shields payout decisions from judicial review and does not require public disclosure of recipients or amounts, raising questions about oversight. The fund’s broad eligibility criteria allow almost anyone alleging "weaponization" or "lawfare" to apply, potentially opening the door to numerous claims.
Looking ahead, the commission’s selections and the fund’s administration will be closely watched as it begins distributing money. The fund’s operations and impact on claims of political targeting will unfold over the next several years, with the fund scheduled to expire in December 2028. The Justice Department and White House have not clarified if there will be limits on administrative spending.