How much corruption will Republicans in Congress tolerate? All of them were hiding under their desks or running for their lives on January 6, 2021. How do they feel about the rioters of that infamous day getting a reward for their efforts to overturn the Constitution? How do they feel about handing out money to the people chanting “Hang Mike Pence!” And rewards for those who beat the Capitol Police officers? I watched the events from start to finish. It was a shameful day in our history.
The New York Times editorial board published the following editorial yesterday. The headline: “There Has Never Been an Example of Presidential Corruption Like This.“
Has there ever been an episode of presidential corruption so blatant and threatening to constitutional order? Certainly not in modern times. President Trump’s Justice Department is using taxpayer money to create a $1.8 billion political slush fund. Ostensibly set up to compensate those who the department claims have “suffered weaponization and lawfare,” it will in fact reward loyalists willing to defy the law and commit violence on behalf of the president.
The fund manages to combine three of Mr. Trump’s most alarming behaviors. One, it is an obvious form of corruption, coming from a president who has used his office to enrich himself, his family and his allies. Two, the fund continues his pattern of using the Justice Department as an enforcer to punish his perceived opponents and protect his friends and allies. Three, the fund is his latest attempt to rewrite history about the 2020 election and the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on Congress.
It is worth pausing to put the fund into the larger context of Mr. Trump’s political project: He is destroying pillars of American democracy to empower himself. He claims elections are legitimate only if he wins. He uses federal law enforcement to investigate and prosecute his perceived enemies. He purges his party of officials who defy him. He describes members of the other party and civil society as traitors and enemies. He incentivizes his supporters to break the law on his behalf and rewards them when they do. He directs his allies to change election rules to keep his party in power.
Mr. Trump’s project has not yet succeeded, at least not fully. Many Americans — in the judicial system, in Congress, in state governments and elsewhere — continue to stand up for democracy and oppose his autocratic ambitions. By now, though, nobody should have illusions about what he is attempting to do.
The fund’s existence is a story of political self-dealing. It is nominally the product of a flimsy personal lawsuit that Mr. Trump filed this year against the Internal Revenue Service, which he oversees, over the leaking of his tax returns during his first term. That lawsuit led to an absurd negotiation, in which the lawyers on one side worked for Mr. Trump the citizen and those on the other side worked for Mr. Trump the president.
Adding to absurdity, the government lawyers reported to Todd Blanche, the acting attorney general, who previously worked as Mr. Trump’s personal lawyer. A federal judge in Miami helping to oversee the case, Kathleen Williams, pointed out that the two sides were not adversaries, which called into question the process. Even Mr. Trump acknowledged the situation shortly after filing the suit by saying, “I am supposed to work out a settlement with myself.”
Yet the talks proceeded because Mr. Trump’s Justice Department was in charge. Unsurprisingly, they led to a deal that was extremely favorable to him.
In exchange for the president’s dropping the suit against the I.R.S., both he and his supporters will receive government handouts. For Mr. Trump, the handout comes in the form of permission to have cheated on his taxes. The government has granted himand his family immunity from ongoing audits of his tax payments. He has a long history of using questionable accounting maneuvers, and the audits could have cost him more than $100 million, experts have said. Now they will cost him nothing.
For his supporters, the handouts will come from the slush fund. The Justice Department will tap a permanent stream of revenue that Congress created in 1956, known as the Judgment Fund, to settle lawsuits against the federal government. As Paul Figley, a former Justice Department official, noted, the new fund appears to be both legal and at odds with Congress’s intent. “It’s horrible policy,” Mr. Figley told The Times.
The department has allocated $1.8 billion for what it calls, in an Orwellian flourish, an Anti-Weaponization Fund and invited applications from people who have been targeted for “political, personal or ideological reasons.” Mr. Blanche — who holds his position as acting attorney general largely because of his willingness to use federal power in service of Mr. Trump’s personal whims — will appoint a five-member board, with congressional leaders given input on one of the five. Mr. Trump can fire any of the members at any time.
To understand who is likely to receive payments, look at who has previously received settlements from the Justice Department. Michael Flynn, who was briefly Mr. Trump’s national security adviser in 2017, received $1.25 million, even though he pleaded guilty to lying to F.B.I. agents. The family of Ashli Babbitt, who participated in the Jan. 6 riot, and whom federal agents shot as she and others approached the House floor, received nearly $5 million, even though investigators cleared the shooters of wrongdoing. The Trump administration is paying off people who committed violence and crimes, as long as they are Trump allies.
The fund’s timeline is the giveaway of how Mr. Trump plans to use it. The Justice Department said the fund would stop processing claims on Dec. 15, 2028, weeks before the president is to leave office, ensuring the money is distributed while he still holds the power to fire anyone who objects. The window is precisely the window of Mr. Trump’s authority.
Even some of Mr. Trump’s usual defenders are unhappy. Senator John Thune, Republican of South Dakota and the majority leader, meekly said that he was “not a big fan” of the fund. Brian Morrissey, the Treasury Department’s general counsel, resigned within hours of the announcement, seven months after the Senate had confirmed him.
Providing payoffs is only part of the point. Another, according to Mr. Blanche, is “ensuring this never happens again.” What, exactly, is “this”? The evenhanded enforcement of the law.
The Trump administration has already fired federal agents who did their duties by investigating the president’s attempts to overturn the 2020 election. Mr. Trump has issued blanket clemency to more than 1,500 Jan. 6 rioters, some of whom may soon receive payments. His Justice Department secured an indictment of James Comey, the former F.B.I. director, on dubious charges as retribution for his role in the investigation of the 2016 Trump campaign’s Russia ties. The fund continues the effort to turn law enforcement into a tool of raw political power.
The fund also encourages future lawlessness on Mr. Trump’s behalf. It sends the message that he will use his power not only to shield people who break the law from accountability but also to shower benefits on them. Just as punishment is a deterrent, rewards are an incentive.
After President Richard Nixon’s abuses in the Watergate scandal, Congress and the executive branch built rules and traditions to ensure that federal agencies, especially the Justice Department, operated in the public interest, rather than that of the president. Mr. Trump has tried to break this system. Once he is gone, it will need to be rebuilt, and better than before. He has exposed and exploited its flaws and gaps. Unless they are filled, Mr. Trump’s corruption and perversion of justice risk becoming the norm.
In the meantime, Americans should be cleareyed about what the president is doing. He is taking their money and showering it on criminals.

An Orwellian flourish indeed
LikeLike
So exhausted by this vile, traitorous, ignorant cretinous criminal. It’s going to take a long, long time to dig out of the dung pile he leaves behind him.
LikeLike
Norms have been broken, institutions crushed and discarded, the government has harassed the media, law firms, universities, science has been pushed aside and defunded, basic research discarded. The first job of the next president is to fire everyone Trump appointed, then to tear down all his monuments to himself.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Exhausted by Trump, yes. Yet it’s energizing to think and hope that I can outlast him and celebrate his last day in office.
LikeLiked by 1 person
“President Trump’s Justice Department is using taxpayer money to create a $1.8 billion political slush fund.”
I don’t understand the point of the NYT editorial staff writing a single editorial they label as an “opinion” that is contradicted in their dozens of clearly labeled NEWS (i.e. supposedly “factual”) stories written by Adam Liptak, their own legal expert, and all of their news reporters. As the public has been told by the so-called liberal media, this is a “settlement agreement” in response to a Trump lawsuit and people may or may not like the terms of what the NYTimes NEWS reporters call a “settlement offer”, but that simply reflects their own partisan viewpoints.
Adam Liptak even NYT-splains on camera in a NYT multimedia piece:
“You can call it clever, you can call it cynical, you can call it bad faith”, but the one thing that Liptak makes clear is that you can never ever say that there is anything illegal or unconstitutional about Trump doing this if he wants to. Trump is just “testing” Constitutional limits. And Liptak and the rest of the NYT reporting staff want the public to know that it’s simply impossible to know what the right answer is. Surely the NYT would report this exactly the same way if a Democrat President filed a ridiculous, evidence-free billion dollar lawsuit with absolutely zero merit and shortly afterward his own DOJ agreed to “settle” it by giving him a huge amount of money and making him immune for any prosecution for anything! Surely the NYT would barely mention the fact that a Democrat President’s lawsuit had no merit and would instead wrest with the “important” narrative they believed was most “newsworthy” – how “cynical” or “clever” this was for a Democrat to do. And then never mention it again. And if you believe that, I have 1,000 articles about “her emails” to sell ya, cheap.
Anyway, it’s been 2 days, so the subject of Trump’s “settlement agreement” that some partisans don’t like is no longer even a news story anymore in the mainstream so-called “liberal” media. Which signals to America that “even the liberal media” knows this isn’t an important issue.
To their credit, the NYT also gave similarly minimal coverage to Obama’s “tan suit” scandal, so obviously they are very fair and balanced, because the NYT gave the same “this is not an important issue” news coverage to both the Democratic “tan suit” scandal and the Republican “settlement agreement” scandal. Thus signaling that they are both simply not very concerning, unlike “her emails” and “Biden’s dementia”, where reporters were absolutely certain was something that the public needed to be reminded of in every news story about them for months.
LikeLike
Have you noticed that when Trump, who is 79, learns something, finally, that the rest of us knew when we were five, he comments on it and prefaces it with, “Most people don’t know. . .” ? consider, for example, this recent gem from the moron in chief: “He’s a dumb person. D. U. M. Not the B. Most people don’t know it has a B.”
Lord help us. A man this ignorant is our president. It’s breathtaking.
LikeLike
That’s a NSS headline.
Took em this long to figure that out? Sad, indeed very sad.
LikeLike