Updated
Updated · The Associated Press · Jun 2
Senate Republicans Press Trump on $1.8 Billion Fund as Immigration Bill Stalls
Updated
Updated · The Associated Press · Jun 2

Senate Republicans Press Trump on $1.8 Billion Fund as Immigration Bill Stalls

3 articles · Updated · The Associated Press · Jun 2
  • $1.776 billion in settlement money is set for a Tuesday GOP Senate meeting after the Justice Department agreed to obey a court order pausing the fund for two weeks.
  • Republican senators say the pause is not enough and want Trump to explicitly scrap what critics call a “weaponization fund” that could compensate Jan. 6 rioters.
  • The dispute has frozen a three-year immigration funding bill for ICE and Border Patrol, with John Thune saying its path this week remains uncertain.
  • Trump is now reconsidering whether to proceed with the fund at all, after senators revolted over a settlement tied to his IRS tax-return leak lawsuit.
  • Judge Leonie Brinkema set a June 12 hearing on whether to extend the halt, leaving the fund’s future and related Senate legislation in limbo.
Can a President create a billion-dollar settlement fund without judicial or congressional oversight?
Is it legal for a settlement to grant permanent audit immunity to a President and his family?

Trump’s $1.8 Billion "Anti-Weaponization" Fund Sparks Legal Showdown, GOP Division, and Legislative Gridlock

Overview

As of June 2, 2026, the Trump administration’s $1.8 billion “anti-weaponization” fund is at a standstill due to a federal judge’s temporary order blocking any further action on it. This legal halt, brought by opponents including a January 6 prosecutor, has deepened the political deadlock. Senate Republicans are pressuring the administration to either limit or scrap the fund, even threatening to act themselves if the White House does not. With a court hearing set for June 12 and Republicans demanding a permanent shutdown, the fund’s future remains uncertain, stalling broader legislative efforts in Washington.

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