A fund created through a presidential settlement with the IRS is generating significant backlash, and the criticism is not coming solely from Democrats. Republican senators have begun pushing back loudly against the 1.8 billion dollar Anti-Weaponization Fund, raising legal, ethical, and constitutional objections that have put the Trump administration on the defensive.
Roughly 45 Republican senators attended a recent closed-door meeting with Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche, and by multiple accounts the room was not friendly. Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas, who was present, described at least half the chamber firing criticism directly at the attorney general. The resistance reflects a growing unease within the party about an arrangement that even some of the president’s staunchest allies are struggling to defend.
Where the fund came from
The legal origins of the Anti-Weaponization Fund trace back to a lawsuit Trump filed against the IRS following the illegal leak of his tax returns by a contractor named Charles Littlejohn. Littlejohn pleaded guilty to what Trump’s own legal team described as a serious breach, but the lawsuit faced immediate credibility problems. Critics noted that Trump filed his complaint more than two years after Littlejohn’s guilty plea, raising questions about whether it cleared standard legal thresholds.
The situation was complicated further by the nature of the litigation itself. Trump was suing agencies he directly oversees, represented by government lawyers who were simultaneously bound by a February 2025 executive order prohibiting them from advancing legal interpretations that conflict with the president’s position. The federal judge overseeing the case raised questions about whether the lawsuit represented a genuine dispute between genuinely opposing parties, a basic requirement for a lawsuit to proceed.
The May 2025 settlement that resolved the case assigned 1.776 billion dollars to the fund, a figure the agreement described as based on projected future claims. The numerical choice was not coincidental. The figure references the year of the nation’s founding, a detail the settlement document highlighted.
Why critics say the fund is legally dubious
Legal analysts and opposing senators have raised pointed questions about whether the fund violates Justice Department rules that were not created by Democrats but reaffirmed by Attorney General Pam Bondi in February 2025. Those rules generally prohibit settling a lawsuit by directing payments to parties who were never part of the original dispute, and the Anti-Weaponization Fund does exactly that. The grievances the fund is designed to compensate have no direct connection to Trump’s claims against the IRS regarding contractor oversight.
The fund’s governance structure has drawn equal scrutiny. Its five-member board will be appointed entirely by the attorney general and can be removed by the president at any time without stated cause. The fund is also set to stop processing claims approximately six weeks before Trump leaves office, a timeline that critics argue is designed to maximize the administration’s control over who ultimately receives money.
Republican resistance grows
The sharpest criticism has come from within the party itself. Sen. Thom Tillis of North Carolina described as deeply troubling the possibility that the fund could be used to compensate individuals convicted of assaulting law enforcement officers during the January 6, 2021 Capitol riot, many of whom were later pardoned by Trump. Sen. Mitch McConnell of Kentucky called any arrangement that functioned as a mechanism to pay people who attacked police officers both foolish and morally indefensible.
The concern is grounded in the fund’s own framing. The settlement agreement describes the problem of government weaponization as a uniquely Democratic pattern of behavior, and the board overseeing disbursements operates entirely under presidential control. While the Justice Department has said there are no partisan requirements to file a claim, the structure of the fund has left many unconvinced that outcomes will reflect anything other than political alignment.
Trump himself acknowledged the unusual nature of the arrangement shortly after filing the original lawsuit, noting that he was effectively negotiating a settlement with himself. That admission has done little to quiet a controversy that continues to widen on both sides of the aisle.

