Trump put on notice his 'middle finger to Capitol Hill' could blow up in his face
U.S. President Donald Trump speaks in the Oval Office at the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., June 11, 2026. REUTERS/Daniel Heuer
June 11, 2026
President Donald Trump's team has reportedly planned under-the-table tactics to effectively still go through with the "Anti-Weaponization Fund" to pay off his allies who have been charged with crimes. But this is taking a huge risk, Punchbowl News' Jake Sherman told MS NOW's Erielle Reshef on Thursday.
The scheme, considered a slush fund by critics, drew bipartisan backlash, but ultimately Senate Republicans decided not to take legislative action against it after the Justice Department said it wouldn't go through with the plan. The new reporting could change the calculus, Sherman argued.
"Jake, did lawmakers think that they had put this all behind them?" asked Reshef. "What's the reaction on Capitol Hill, that this could come back to life?"
Republicans, replied Sherman, "had [acting Attorney General Todd] Blanche in committee sayingit wasn't going to happen. Theyhad assurances from the WhiteHouse that wasn't going tohappen. And and they voted downseveral amendments to make sureit didn't happen." Clearly, he continued, they thought all this had been a settled issue.
If "the administration does thisin any way, shape or form," Sherman continued, it would constitute "a huge middle finger to Capitol Hill ... And therewill be, I would imagine therewill be legislativerepercussions."
"Legislatively, what moves can Congress take to kill this?" Reshef pressed him. "Do they have options at this point?"
Sherman confirmed "they have lots of options." In addition to passing a law that would outright ban it, "they could also use theappropriations process toexplicitly prohibit any moneyfrom going to this. There areways."
Republicans chose not to use those powers because they thought Trump had backed down, he added, but "they have otheropportunities to do that shouldthey want to in the next, youknow, 6 to 8 months."