The Virginia courtâs intervention has transformed what looked like an insideâbaseball settlement into a national flashpoint. The AntiâWeaponization Fund, born from a deal to end Trumpâs $10 billion IRS lawsuit over leaked tax returns, is now under a legal microscope. Judge Leonie Brinkemaâs order stops everything: no transfers in, no claims reviewed, no payouts made, until she hears full arguments. That pause gives criticsâDemocrats, civil liberties groups, and wouldâbe excluded claimantsâtime to press their case that the fund is both legally dubious and structurally unfair.
On Capitol Hill, the battle is even more raw. House Republicans blocked an amendment that would have barred Jan. 6 defendants from receiving compensation, fueling accusations that the program could become a backdoor bailout for those convicted in the Capitol attack. For Democrats, itâs proof of a âsecret slush fund.â For Republicans, itâs framed as overdue restitution for people targeted by a politicized government. As the June 12 hearing approaches, the stakes stretch far beyond $1.8 billion: the outcome will test the limits of executive power, congressional oversight, and how far a former president can go in rewriting the narrative of who, exactly, has been wronged by the state.