Former Vice President Mike Pence called
Donald Trump's $1.8 billion "anti-weaponisation" fund "deeply offensive" and a "bad idea from the start" in Sunday remarks, pairing the policy attack with a broader Wall Street Journal op-ed questioning
Trump's conservative credentials and "hostility to constitutional order." Pence's framing draws weight from his being a January 6 target who would, in some readings, be eligible for fund-routed compensation, the BBC reported. The former VP's pitch is for the administration to "just drop" the disbursement entirely, The Hill reported.
What is Pence's policy line? Pence pushed to "get rid of" the fund and called it "a bad idea from the start," The Hill reported. The substantive attack pairs a procedural objection — the fund's design — with the personal optics that Pence himself sat among those the fund could in principle compensate, the BBC reported.
What's the broader critique? Pence used a Wall Street Journal op-ed to argue
Trump has shifted away from his conservative base toward populist policies, the WSJ piece carried in The Hill's same-week coverage of the op-ed. The critique flagged what Pence called
Trump's "hostility to constitutional order," widening the dispute beyond the single fund into a Republican-identity argument.
Why does this hit harder than typical critics? Pence carries direct credibility on both the policy ground (the fund's compensable cohort overlaps with his January 6 attackers) and the partisan ground (former VP, evangelical conservative wing), so the rebuke lands with intra-coalition weight rather than reading as routine opposition. The Sunday-show remarks plus the same-week op-ed look synchronised to maximise pressure ahead of the Schumer-led Senate push.
Figures referenced: Donald Trump. — JudgeMarket.