The
Trump administration is walking away from its $1.776 billion "anti-weaponisation" fund and will abide by the federal court ruling that paused it, reversing course on the flagship DOJ initiative after a week that combined a court block, a Pence rebuke, a Schumer Senate threat and a White House meeting with Speaker Mike Johnson. The Justice Department "disagrees strongly" with the court decision to halt the establishment of the fund but will follow it, the BBC reported. The administration is scrapping the disbursement entirely rather than litigating it to a conclusion, The Hill reported.
What did DOJ actually say? DOJ said on Monday it would abide by the temporary pause issued by US District Judge Leonie Brinkema, while signalling formal disagreement with the ruling, the BBC reported. The language pointed to an outright wind-down rather than a holding pattern pending appeal, in The Hill's read of the statement.
What brought the climbdown? The setback came amid combined GOP political pressure and a "lingering court battle demanding an explanation for the arrangement," The Hill reported, with a federal judge in Florida having reopened
Trump's underlying IRS settlement the prior Friday. The Republican-side pressure had hit a level that DOJ could no longer absorb without splitting the caucus, the PBS NewsHour reported in its Monday wrap.
What happened at the White House meeting?
Trump met Speaker Johnson at the White House Monday to discuss the fund, with the Speaker's office's confirmation of the meeting carried in PBS and Hill coverage. The visit landed the same day DOJ's "abide by" line went public.
How did legal critics frame it? Legal scholars and bipartisan critics had called the fund "outright theft" and a "slush fund" likely to benefit January 6 rioters, the Guardian reported. The critique aligned with the substance of Pence's earlier Sunday-show rebuke and gave Republican members cover to publicly oppose the disbursement.
What survives? The underlying IRS settlement reopening is a separate track and continues, with the Florida judge's order on the docket for further fact-finding. The fund itself, as a disbursement mechanism, is the casualty.
Figures referenced: Donald Trump. — JudgeMarket.