The Real Danger Isn’t the Fund. It’s the Precedent.
Former judges are mounting a legal offensive against Trump’s new $1.8 billion compensation structure because they fear what future presidents could do with it..
The Real Danger Isn’t the Fund. It’s the Precedent.
Former judges are mounting a legal offensive against Trump’s new $1.8 billion compensation structure because they fear what future presidents could do with it.
The Jack Hopkins Now Newsletter #910: Thursday, May 28th, 2026.
There are political scandals…
And then…there are moments so brazen…
So structurally dangerous…
That future historians may point to them and say:
“That was the moment the line disappeared.”
This may be one of those moments.
Because while most Americans were distracted by the daily chaos machine…
A quiet legal maneuver just produced something extraordinary:
A nearly $1.8 BILLION taxpayer-funded “anti-weaponization” compensation fund tied directly to Donald Trump and his allies.
And now…
Former judges…prosecutors…watchdog groups…and Capitol police officers…are trying to stop it before it becomes operational.
Not because they dislike Trump.
Not because they’re “partisan.”
But…because many of them believe this thing represents something America has never seen before:
A sitting president….potentially using the machinery of government…to create a massive compensation pool for political loyalists using taxpayer money.
And if that sounds insane…
That’s because it is.
The Part Almost Nobody Understands
Most people hear “anti-weaponization fund” and assume it’s just political branding.
It’s much bigger than that.
The fund reportedly emerged from Trump’s lawsuit against the IRS over leaked tax returns.
Normally…cases like this end with damages…settlements…or…dismissal.
But…critics say this situation…mutated into something entirely different.
Instead of a conventional resolution…
The Justice Department reportedly agreed to create a compensation structure worth roughly $1.776 billion for people claiming they were victims of “government weaponization.”
Read that sentence again….slowly.
Not Congress.
Not legislation.
Not a bipartisan compensation board.
A settlement structure…connected to Trump’s own legal grievance.
And according to critics…
The people overseeing the money…could largely be chosen by Trump-aligned figures.
That’s the part setting off alarms across the legal world.
Because once you understand the mechanism…
You realize this isn’t merely about money.
It’s about power.
Why Former Judges Are Calling This Dangerous
Here’s the constitutional issue at the center of the explosion:
Congress controls federal spending.
That’s not optional.
That’s foundational.
The executive branch is not supposed to invent giant taxpayer-funded compensation systems without congressional authorization.
But critics argue…this fund effectively bypasses Congress entirely.
Which raises a terrifying question:
If a president can negotiate a settlement with agencies under his own administration…
And…then redirect taxpayer money into a politically controlled compensation structure…
What exactly stops future presidents from doing the same thing?
Think carefully about the precedent here.
Could a future administration create:
A “climate victim compensation fund” for ideological allies?
A “media misinformation injury fund”?
A “political harassment reimbursement program”?
Once the barrier breaks…
It doesn’t magically rebuild itself.
That’s why legal experts are reacting so aggressively.
Not because of the headlines.
Because of the architecture.
The Jan. 6 Problem
Then came the detail that detonated the story.
Critics began asking whether January 6 defendants could potentially qualify for payouts.
And instead of immediately shutting the door…
Officials reportedly refused to fully rule it out.
That’s when the situation escalated from controversial…
To radioactive.
Because now…you’re no longer talking about abstract constitutional theory.
Now…you’re talking about the possibility…that people involved in the attack on the Capitol…could potentially receive taxpayer-funded compensation through a politically controlled fund tied to the president they supported.
Even some conservatives…who normally defend Trump…have reportedly grown uncomfortable with the optics.
And honestly?
They should.
Because this isn’t normal politics anymore.
This is the kind of thing nations slide into…when institutional guardrails weaken.
Slowly at first.
Then…all at once.
Why This Feels So Different
Most scandals in Washington are transactional.
Money.
Influence.
Contracts.
This feels different…because it appears deeply personal.
The structure itself…revolves around grievance.
Not national interest.
Not broad public policy.
Grievance.
And that….matters psychologically.
Because grievance-based systems require permanent enemies.
They require constant narratives of persecution.
They require followers to believe:
They are victims,
The leader alone can protect them,
and loyalty deserves reward.
That’s the emotional engine authoritarian systems often run on.
Not strength.
Not confidence.
Perpetual injury.
Perpetual revenge.
Perpetual compensation.
That’s why critics are using phrases like:
“Slush fund”
“Patronage machine”
“Constitutional end-run”
“Unprecedented abuse of settlement authority”
Because the fear isn’t merely corruption.
The fear is normalization.
The Most Dangerous Part Isn’t Even the Money
The money is enormous.
But honestly?
That may not even be the most important part.
The truly dangerous part is psychological.
Because if political loyalty becomes financially tied to perceived victimhood…
Then politics itself changes.
People stop merely supporting leaders.
They become economically dependent on the continuation of conflict.
And once a movement’s emotional identity and financial incentives fuse together…
Rational politics becomes nearly impossible.
That’s when systems start eating themselves alive.
The Courts May Decide More Than They Realize
The lawsuits challenging the fund are still in early stages.
And…there’s a real possibility…courts could avoid the biggest constitutional questions by dismissing cases on standing grounds.
But if the courts DO fully engage this issue…
The implications could be massive.
Because the judges may ultimately decide:
How far presidential settlement authority actually goes,
Whether Congress’s spending power still means anything,
and…whether future presidents can build quasi-political compensation structures through executive mechanisms alone.
This is much bigger than Trump.
That’s the uncomfortable truth.
Because every expansion of power…eventually changes hands.
Always.
Americans Should Pay Very Close Attention Here
A lot of people will dismiss this story because they’re exhausted.
And…honestly…that exhaustion is understandable.
But exhaustion…is also how structural shifts quietly become permanent.
Most democratic erosion does not arrive with tanks.
It arrives wrapped in legal language…
bureaucratic procedure…
and emotionally satisfying narratives about enemies and justice.
Until one day…people wake up…and realize the system itself changed…while everyone argued over personalities.
That’s why this matters.
Not because it’s one more scandal.
But…because it may represent another test…of whether institutional boundaries in America still exist…
Or…whether they’re now becoming optional…depending on who holds power.
And once that principle disappears…
Getting it back is very difficult.
The Constitutional Trap Hidden Inside This Fund
Most Americans are looking at this story emotionally.
That’s understandable.
The headlines alone sound surreal:
Trump
A billion-dollar fund
“Weaponization”
Jan. 6 concerns
Lawsuits
Former judges sounding alarms
But the emotional reaction…is not actually the most important part of this story.
The structural implications are.
Because critics…are not simply arguing that Trump created a controversial fund.
They’re arguing he may have exposed a constitutional loophole capable of permanently altering the relationship…between presidential power and taxpayer money.
And that’s…where this story becomes genuinely dangerous.
The Judgment Fund Is Supposed to Be Boring
The mechanism at the center of this controversy is something called the Judgment Fund.
Almost nobody outside legal circles pays attention to it because…historically…it’s been dull administrative plumbing.
Its purpose is straightforward:
When the federal government loses lawsuits or settles claims…money can be paid through the Judgment Fund…without Congress having to pass a brand-new appropriations bill every single time.
That system exists for practical reasons.
Otherwise government litigation would become unmanageable.
But…critics say Trump’s “anti-weaponization” settlement pushes the mechanism into territory…it was never intended to enter.
Because this was not merely a private citizen suing the government.
This involved:
The sitting president,
His administration,
His Justice Department,
and a settlement structure that allegedly creates a massive compensation system connected to claims of political persecution.
That distinction matters enormously.
Because once a president can negotiate settlements involving agencies under his own executive authority…
The line between neutral government administration and politically directed compensation begins to blur.
Badly.
The Question Terrifying Legal Scholars
Here’s the core question constitutional scholars are wrestling with:
Can a president effectively create a taxpayer-funded political grievance compensation system…through executive settlement authority…without direct congressional authorization?
That is the fight.
Not the branding.
Not the outrage cycle.
That question.
Because Congress is supposed to control spending.
That’s one of the oldest constitutional guardrails in the country.
The Founders understood something simple but profound:
If executives gain the power to distribute money politically…
Democracy eventually corrodes.
That’s why appropriations authority sits with Congress.
It prevents presidents from personally rewarding allies…or constructing loyalty systems with public funds.
But…critics say…this settlement structure may represent an unprecedented workaround.
And if courts allow it to stand…
Future presidents may study it very carefully.
This Is How Precedents Become Regimes
Most Americans think dangerous systems arrive suddenly.
History says otherwise.
Usually they arrive procedurally.
Legally.
Incrementally.
Wrapped in justification.
Always with a narrative…explaining why extraordinary powers are necessary.
That’s what makes this story so important.
Because if this mechanism survives legal challenge, future administrations may realize they can potentially:
Redefine political allies as institutional victims,
Channel settlements into ideologically aligned compensation structures,
and bypass normal appropriations politics entirely.
Even if portions are later restricted…
The precedent itself changes the landscape.
Once a constitutional barrier weakens…it rarely returns to full strength.
Future operators simply become more sophisticated.
The Psychology Behind the Entire System
And this is where the story becomes even more unsettling.
Because the financial structure is only half the equation.
The emotional structure matters just as much.
Trump’s political movement has long revolved around a central psychological narrative:
“We are the victims.”
The media victimized us.
The FBI victimized us.
The courts victimized us.
The “deep state” victimized us.
Trump was persecuted because he fought for you.
That narrative has been repeated so relentlessly that it no longer functions as mere rhetoric.
For many supporters…it has become identity itself.
And…identity built around grievance…behaves differently than ordinary politics.
Grievance movements require enemies.
Constantly.
They require persecution narratives.
They require proof that the group remains under attack.
Because the emotional cohesion of the movement…depends on sustained outrage and perceived injustice.
Now introduce a compensation structure into that environment.
Suddenly…grievance is no longer just psychological fuel.
It becomes administrative.
Potentially financial.
Potentially institutionalized.
That…changes everything.
The Evolution of Grievance Economies
Historically, grievance-based political systems evolve in stages.
First:
Followers are told they are being wronged.
Then:
Institutions investigating the movement become framed as illegitimate.
Then:
Accountability itself becomes persecution.
Then:
The leader positions himself as the sole protector against institutional enemies.
Then:
Rewards begin flowing toward loyalists framed as victims.
That is the stage critics fear America may be approaching.
Not because every Trump supporter wants authoritarianism.
Most do not.
But…because political systems often evolve beyond the intentions of ordinary supporters…once grievance becomes embedded inside state structures.
And…once that happens…incentives change.
Loyalty becomes economically meaningful.
Victimhood becomes politically valuable.
Conflict becomes necessary for cohesion.
The movement must remain under attack forever…because the identity itself depends on ongoing persecution.
That is why critics are so alarmed.
Not merely because of the money.
Because of the incentives the structure creates.
Why Former Judges Are Moving So Aggressively
Former judges and prosecutors understand something most Americans understandably do not:
Institutions are often destroyed slowly…before they collapse suddenly.
The public usually notices the collapse.
Insiders notice the erosion.
And…many legal experts appear to believe this fund represents erosion.
Not dictatorship tomorrow morning.
Not tanks rolling down Pennsylvania Avenue.
Something potentially more dangerous:
The normalization of executive boundary expansion.
That’s how democracies usually weaken.
One justified exception at a time.
One workaround at a time.
One emotionally satisfying expansion of power at a time.
Until eventually the public no longer remembers where the original lines were supposed to be.
The Real Story Is Bigger Than Trump
This is the part many Americans on both sides may resist hearing:
The biggest danger here is not Trump himself.
It’s the precedent.
Because every power created for one administration eventually transfers to another.
Always.
Every workaround…survives beyond the people who invented it.
Every weakened norm…becomes available to future actors.
That’s why constitutional systems depend so heavily on restraint.
Not merely legality.
Restraint.
And…critics fear restraint itself is rapidly disappearing from American governance.
That is why this fight matters.
Not because it’s one more scandal in an endless news cycle.
But…because it may help determine whether the constitutional guardrails around executive power still function…
Or whether they are slowly becoming optional suggestions.
And once a republic reaches that stage…
History shows the next phase is rarely stability.
#HoldFast
Back soon.
-Jack
Jack Hopkins
P.S.
One of the biggest mistakes people make during democratic stress cycles is assuming every alarming development is isolated.
They’re usually not.
The real danger often emerges when seemingly disconnected events…begin forming a coherent system.
That’s what I’m watching now.
Sources
Justice Department Announces Anti-Weaponization Fund — U.S. Department of Justice (official press release)
DOJ announces $1.7B ‘Anti-Weaponization Fund’ as part of Trump IRS lawsuit settlement — ABC News
What to Know About the DOJ’s New ‘Anti-Weaponization Fund’ — Time
DOJ sets up $1.8B ‘anti-weaponization’ fund after Trump drops IRS lawsuit — NBC News
U.S. creates $1.8B ‘lawfare’ fund in exchange for Trump dropping $10B IRS suit — CNBC
Trump’s $1.8 billion ‘anti-weaponization’ fund is simply unconstitutional — MSNBC (opinion)




Grrrrrrr!!!
Thank you, Jack. I was already furious about this but admittedly, I hadn’t thought of it this way… the precedent.. It’s frightening.
There’s so much I’d miss if I weren’t here. There are days when I almost wish I didn’t see things so clearly but we NEED this. We need to understand just how dangerous what’s happening actually is. I’m grateful to have found you early in all this and to be here now.. even if sometimes it’s difficult.
I hope the former judges.. prosecutors.. and others are successful in stopping it. I hope the guardrails hold.
#Holdfast
~Susan