Breaking
ITGuerra Iran, pesanti raid Usa su Hormuz. Trump: "Rappresaglia ad attacchi su navi"KR세종 북부에 호우경보 발효KR천안 호우경보 발효…공주·계룡·청양도 포함INTrump Warns Iran of Worsening Situation After US StrikesTRKırklareli'nde eski eş cinayeti: Anne öldü, 4 yaşındaki kızı yaralandıKR자살방조 주장했으나 CCTV에 덜미…살인 혐의 자백RUЭрдоган предложил Турции как площадку для переговоров России и УкраиныRUГлава Приднестровья: Молдавия ведет информационную войну против ПриднестровьяITErdogan regala revolver personalizzati ai leader del vertice NATO ad AnkaraDEExxonMobil investiert eine Milliarde Dollar in NigeriaITGuerra Iran, pesanti raid Usa su Hormuz. Trump: "Rappresaglia ad attacchi su navi"KR세종 북부에 호우경보 발효KR천안 호우경보 발효…공주·계룡·청양도 포함INTrump Warns Iran of Worsening Situation After US StrikesTRKırklareli'nde eski eş cinayeti: Anne öldü, 4 yaşındaki kızı yaralandıKR자살방조 주장했으나 CCTV에 덜미…살인 혐의 자백RUЭрдоган предложил Турции как площадку для переговоров России и УкраиныRUГлава Приднестровья: Молдавия ведет информационную войну против ПриднестровьяITErdogan regala revolver personalizzati ai leader del vertice NATO ad AnkaraDEExxonMobil investiert eine Milliarde Dollar in Nigeria
Newsgather
BackMcConnell Blasts DOJ's "Lawfare" Fund After Blanche Meets GOP Senators
McConnell Blasts DOJ's "Lawfare" Fund After Blanche Meets GOP Senators
Urgent
CNBC5/21/2026Politics3 min read

McConnell Blasts DOJ's "Lawfare" Fund After Blanche Meets GOP Senators

Quick Look

  • Mitch McConnell and other GOP senators criticized the DOJ's new "lawfare" fund, intended to compensate victims of prosecutorial overreach.
  • Concerns were raised that the fund could compensate individuals who assaulted police officers during the Jan.
  • 6 Capitol riot.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche met with Republican senators to discuss a new, controversial "lawfare" fund established by the Department of Justice. The fund is intended to settle claims of prosecutorial overreach but has drawn criticism for potentially compensating individuals who attacked police during the Jan. 6 Capitol riot.

Font size

Sen. Mitch McConnell on Thursday blasted Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche for the Department of Justice's new controversial "lawfare" fund hours after Blanche met with Republican senators in an effort to assuage their concerns about it.

"So the nation's top law enforcement official is asking for a slush fund to pay people who assault cops? Utterly stupid, morally wrong – Take your pick," McConnell, R-Ky., said in a statement obtained by MS NOW.

McConnell is the former Senate majority leader.

Blanche, earlier in the day, met with GOP senators as pushback grows in Congress over the idea of paying out settlements to people who attacked police during the U.S. Capitol riot in 2021.

"I think it's stupid on stilts," Sen. Thom Tillis, R-N.C., told Spectrum News in an interview about the $1.8 billion fund, which was created to settle an unrelated lawsuit by President Donald Trump against the Internal Revenue Service.

The fund would purportedly compensate those who allege they were victims of prosecutorial overreach or worse by the DOJ during the Biden administration, which could include hundreds of people convicted or charged in connection with the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol by a mob of Trump supporters.

"It will invariably put us in a position where your taxpayer dollars and my taxpayers' dollars could potentially compensate someone who assaulted a police officer, admitted their guilt, got convicted, got pardoned, and now we're gonna pay them for that?" Tillis said.

"That's absurd," he added. "The American people are going to reject this out of hand."

Blanche's meeting with GOP senators came a day after Rep. Jamie Raskin, D-Md., introduced a bill that would bar federal money from being used for the DOJ's "Anti-Weaponization Fund," and after two police officers who defended the Capitol on Jan. 6 filed a lawsuit seeking to have the fund declared illegal.

Democrats in Congress have called the fund a corrupt "slush fund."

On Thursday, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and Senate Finance Committee ranking member Ron Wyden, D-Ore., introduced legislation that would slap a 100% tax on any payments from the fund.

Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., told reporters Thursday, "Right now we want to hear the attorney general about his view of this and what they intend to do with it."

"But obviously, our members have very legitimate questions about it," Thune said, adding that his caucus has had conversations about "how we might make sure that it's fenced in appropriately."

In an interview with CNN on Wednesday, Blanche said commissioners who will be appointed to administer the fund will be responsible for considering a claimant's conduct in applications for compensation.

"One of the factors the commissioners have to consider is what the claimant did — the claimant's conduct," Blanche told CNN. "The claimant would have to say, 'I assaulted a cop, and I want money.'"

"Whether the commissioners will give that person money – that claimant – it's up to them," the attorney general said. "But that's one of the factors they have to consider."

Blanche will appoint all five commissioners for the fund.

Blanche, who is Trump's former criminal defense attorney, also said the president "does not stand for assaulting law enforcement."

Blanche's interview came after several Senate Republicans questioned the rationale for the fund.

Sen. Bill Cassidy, R-La., told MS NOW he did not see "any legal precedent" for the fund.

"People are concerned about making their own ends meet, not about putting a slush fund together without a legal precedent," Cassidy said.

Thune himself had said he was "not a big fan" of the idea of the fund, according to MS NOW.

"I don't see a purpose for that," he said.

Wyden, in a statement on Thursday, said, "The announcement of this slush fund was staggeringly corrupt even by Trump's bottom-dwelling standards."

What to Watch

AI outlook — possibilities, not facts

  • Legislation will be introduced to block or significantly restrict the use of the DOJ's "Anti-Weaponization Fund."

    Very likely · Within weeks

  • The DOJ will face legal challenges seeking to declare the fund illegal.

    Likely · Within months

  • The fund's commissioners will face intense scrutiny regarding their decisions on compensation claims.

    Very likely · Ongoing

Open Questions

  • What specific criteria will the commissioners use to evaluate claims?
  • How many individuals who attacked police during Jan. 6 could be eligible for compensation?
  • What is the total amount allocated for potential compensation from the fund?
  • Will the proposed legislation to block funding be successful?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by CNBC.

Related Stories

Chris Kaba shooting: Officer may escape misconduct hearing after rule change
Developing·3h ago

Chris Kaba shooting: Officer may escape misconduct hearing after rule change

A police marksman who shot Chris Kaba may no longer face misconduct proceedings after the government changed rules on judging officers' use of force. Sgt Martyn Blake shot Kaba in 2022; Blake was cleared of murder but faced a disciplinary hearing. The IOPC paused the hearing pending rule changes, which have now led them to believe the case should not proceed, sparking anger from Kaba's family and campaigners.

BBC News
More on this topicmitch mcconnell