GOP Sen. Cassidy calls out Trump DOJ’s $1.8 billion compensation fund as ‘slush fund’
...is facing backlash within his party over his $1.8 Billion Slush Fund and these GOP Representatives aren't holding back. Francis Maxwell reacts. Visit Meidas+ | MeidasTouch Network | Substack for more! MeidasTouch relies on SnapStream to record, watch, monitor, and clip the news. Get a FREE TRIAL of SnapStream by clicking here: Record TV with SnapStream to get clips that will … Support the MeidasTouch Network: patreon.com/meidastouch
Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-La.), fresh off of his loss in the Louisiana Senate Republican primary, is calling out the Trump administration’s creation of a $1.8 billion fund to compensate people who claim they were targeted by the Biden Justice Department, saying it raises the specter of self-dealing.
“I don’t actually see any legal precedent for that. We are a nation of laws, you can’t just make up things whole-piece,” Cassidy told reporters when asked about the legal compensation fund for Trump allies who were prosecuted or investigated by the Biden Justice Department.
The administration announced the creation of the compensation fund after Trump withdrew his lawsuit against the Internal Revenue Service demanding $10 billion in damages for an IRS contractor leaking his tax returns to media outlets.
“Somebody explained it to me this way, an attorney. … It is as if somebody sued themselves and agreed upon a settlement with themselves that’s going to be funded by the rest of us. If that’s the case: What?!” he said.
“Wait a second, I just came off the campaign trail. People are concerned about making their own ends meet, not about putting a slush fund together without a legal precedent. We’re a nation of laws,” he added. “If there needs to be a settlement, let’s consider it and Congress should come together and decide on that.”
Senate Democrats on Monday also criticized the establishment of the compensation fund, and described it as a “slush fund.”
Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer (N.Y.) called it “a nearly two-billion-dollar slush fund for his MAGA allies and January 6th insurrectionists.”
“Trump is shaking hands with himself in order to fund his insurrectionist army to the tune of two billion dollars,” he said on the Senate floor.
Cassidy appeared largely unfettered as he spoke to reporters in the Capitol Monday evening after finishing in third place in the Louisiana Senate Republican primary Saturday and failing to make the June 27 runoff.
“I feel great,” he declared when asked about how he felt in the wake of the bruising primary.
Cassidy said he didn’t have any regrets about his decision to vote to convict President Trump on the impeachment charge of inciting insurrection during Trump’s 2021 Senate trial.
“I voted to uphold the Constitution. When I die, if that’s put in my obituary: He voted to uphold the Constitution, it’s going to be better obituary,” he said.
Cassidy pushed back on the legal compensation fund after Trump celebrated Cassidy’s defeat in the weekend primary.
“His disloyalty to the man who got him elected is now a part of legend, and it’s nice to see that his political career is OVER!” Trump posted on Truth Social Saturday.
thehill.com/homenews/5884237-cassidy-calls-out-tr…
How the $1.8 Billion Trump Fund May Violate Past Practice and Policy
The fund that could offer payouts to Trump allies who accuse the government of mistreatment is not only highly unusual but also appears to violate the administration’s own policies.
nytimes.com/2026/05/20/us/politics/trump-fund-exp…
The $1.8 billion fund created by the Trump administration this week to pay people who claim mistreatment by the federal government appears to violate longstanding Justice Department standards and practices, as well as a policy directive issued by the administration last year, legal experts said on Wednesday.
Todd Blanche, the acting attorney general, defended the fund at a Senate hearing on Tuesday, calling it “unusual” but insisting it was appropriate and reflective of past settlements.
Justice Department veterans have been deeply skeptical of those claims, particularly when it comes to a provision in the deal that offers President Trump, his sons Eric and Donald Trump Jr., and the Trump Organization immunity from tax penalties. They have also been critical of the decision to resolve a lawsuit filed by one group of people in a way that gives more than a billion dollars to an entirely different category of people.
“I have never heard of the department ever being willing to grant blanket immunity,” said Jennifer Ricketts, a former branch director in the department’s civil division. “That seems blatantly corrupt. It’s a shocking gift to the president.”
Justice Department veterans also said the new fund appeared to contradict a specific policy instituted by the Trump administration last year under former Attorney General Pam Bondi that largely prohibited payments to groups not involved in an underlying lawsuit.
A Justice Department spokeswoman did not respond to a request for comment.
The deal struck between the president’s lawyers and his own administration, without oversight of a judge, could involve major payouts to people who had not sued the government, as well.
“I’ve just never seen litigation risk outside the four corners of the complaint being used as justification for something in a totally unrelated lawsuit,” Ms. Ricketts added.
Here is more about how the fund could work.
Who would qualify?
Mr. Blanche has not placed limits on who can apply for money from the fund. He has suggested that even President Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s son Hunter, who was prosecuted and convicted by the Biden administration, could apply. At the same time, officials have not explained who is likely to receive money, beyond general statements that the fund is for people victimized by past administrations. Factors that will be considered include legal fees or time in prison.
The president’s words suggest that Eric Adams, the former New York City mayor whose indictment was dropped by the Trump administration last year, would be eligible.
“We were persecuted, Eric. I was persecuted, and so are you,” Mr. Trump told the mayor at a 2024 charity event.
Another possible recipient is Kash Patel, the F.B.I. director, who has long claimed to be a victim of weaponization. At a congressional hearing last year, Mr. Patel said: “You want to know who was targeted by a weaponized F.B.I.? Me.”
The president and his supporters have used the term “weaponization” to broadly define perceived government mistreatment of and misconduct toward them. If the fund’s five commissioners, who will be appointed by Mr. Blanche, adopt that same expansive definition, those eligible for payments could include people such as Jim Hoft, the owner of the right wing site The Gateway Pundit, who sued the government over what he claimed was censorship as a result of federal agencies pressuring social media companies on topics like the 2020 election and the coronavirus pandemic.
Mr. Blanche has said it will take time to appoint commissioners who will craft rules for payouts from the fund, which involves taxpayer money in a Treasury Department account known as the Judgment Fund.
The fund seems to contradict a Trump administration policy
On Pam Bondi’s first day as attorney general in February 2025, she signed a directive that appeared to prohibit an arrangement like the $1.8 billion fund. The memo, titled “Reinstating the Prohibitions on Improper Third Party Settlements,” revived a Justice Department policy that the Trump administration adopted in 2017 and the Biden administration subsequently canceled.
The memo said that except in “limited circumstances,” the department should not use settlements “to require payments to nongovernmental, third-party organizations that were neither victims nor parties to the lawsuits.”
The new fund, however, appears to be structured to steer a large pot of money to third-party claimants, most of whom have not filed suits and may never file suits now that there is a fund.
The purpose of the Bondi memo was to bar the kinds of arrangements sometimes made during the Obama administration, particularly with large financial institutions, that directed money to nongovernmental organizations. To conservatives, the Obama administration too often used the money to advance ideological goals, and the Bondi memo was designed to prevent that.
A year after issuing that memo, the Trump administration plans to give out money to an unspecified number of people for the general purpose of paying “victims” of purported governmental weaponization. The exact size of the fund — $1.776 billion — is intended to convey patriotic symbolism, a highly unusual choice for such a program.
Normally, proposed figures are calculated based on the legal claims lodged against the government, and a risk calculation by Justice Department lawyers about how much juries may ultimately award in the cases. For Mr. Trump’s “anti-weaponization fund,” it is unclear what set of cases or claims formed the basis of a calculation that landed on the $1.776 billion figure.
The paperwork establishing the fund says it can be used to pay “entities,” which seems to trample on the purpose of the Bondi memo.
Devlin Barrett covers the Justice Department and the F.B.I. for The Times.