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Way harder than it should be: Why Congress may balk on $1.7B compensation fund
The Justice Department created a $1.776 billion compensation fund for alleged victims of government 'weaponization' without congressional approval, sparking bipartisan criticism over its legality and funding source. The fund, linked to a Trump-led lawsuit against the IRS, allows political allies to benefit but excludes Trump himself, raising concerns about transparency and executive overreach.
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- Way harder than it should be: Why Congress may balk on $1.7B compensation fund
- Trump $1.8B ‘anti-weaponization’ fund faces legal challenge, GOP criticism
- Critics of Trump’s ‘anti-weaponization fund’ have no way to contest it yet
- What to know about $1.776B DOJ compensation fund for Trump allies
- Democrats: DOJ’s $1.776B ‘anti-weaponization’ fund ‘raises the specter of corruption unparalleled’
- Republicans lash out over on $1.776B ‘anti-weaponization’ fund