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Trump administration drops $1.8bn 'weaponisation' fund

Acting U.S. Attorney General Todd Blanche speaks before a committtee
US Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche has held the position since early April

The Trump administration is abandoning the president's $1.8 billion 'weaponisation' fund, US Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche told politicians, after a rare backlash from Republican senators.

"We are not moving forward with the fund," Mr Blanche said. "Period."

However, Mr Blanche also told politicians that an agreement with President Donald Trump to bar future audits of his or his family's past tax records will remain in place.

The fund emerged from a legal settlement between President Trump and the Justice Department to resolve an unprecedented $10 billion Trump lawsuit against the IRS over the alleged mishandling of his tax records.

The fund was dropped after furious Republican politicians said it might threaten the passage of a $72 billion bill to fund Mr Trump's immigration crackdown.

Mr Blanche, President Trump's former personal attorney, has held the top job at the Justice Department since early April, when Mr Trump fired Pam Bondi as attorney general.

The $1.776 billion fund was meant to pay people who said they had been the subject of government abuse, and Mr Blanche angered senators last month when he would not commit to excluding people who assaulted police officers during the 6 January 2021 assault on the US Capitol.

White House officials spent much of Monday calling politicians to assure them there would be no payouts after the Republican revolt, said two sources familiar with the matter, speaking on the condition of anonymity.

The White House referred questions ‌ to the Justice Department, where a spokesperson said compensating people who have suffered from government abuse is still a priority for the administration.

"The goal of the fund was about continuing the process of fixing the wrongs committed by past administrations, ⁠but given the extraordinary misunderstanding of this, the DOJ is not proceeding with the fund," spokesperson Emily Covington said.

Blanche says he would not put it in ‌writing

At a hearing yesterday afternoon, Democratic politicians pressed for a definitive promise that the fund was dead, ⁠but Mr Blanche said he would ‌not put that in writing.

"Why do I need to put something in writing?" Mr Blanche said. "I'm not committing to doing anything in writing."

Democratic Representative Rosa DeLauro said Mr Blanche should not have signed off on the portion of the agreement that bars future tax audits of Mr Trump and his businesses, noting that he formerly served as Mr Trump's personal attorney.

"You just gave the president ⁠and his family a tax immunity to the tune of about $100 million," Ms DeLauro said, referring to reports that President Trump could face that amount in an IRS tax ⁠penalty.

"Do you not find that there’s any conflict of interest in what you are doing here as the acting attorney general of the United States?," she added.

Mr Blanche said the agreement did not give the president "blanket immunity" and rejected Ms DeLauro’s criticism.

"What are you saying is the conflict?" Mr Blanche responded. "The fact that I used to have a job and I have a current job?"

House Republicans at the hearing did not criticise the fund.

Peter Ticktin, an attorney representing more than 400 6 January defendants, said he and his clients are not dismayed about the announcement.

"They still expect to get paid," said Mr Ticktin, who has filed claims for ten defendants requesting ‌up to $3 million. "They trust Donald Trump."