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DOJ fund is ‘being set aside,’ Johnson says amid GOP confusion

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Speaker Mike Johnson said in an interview Tuesday he believes a controversial “Anti-Weaponization Fund” and security funding for a White House ballroom are both “off the table” for the GOP’s stalled immigration enforcement bill.

“I think the president’s been pretty clear via the Department of Justice — their statement [is] that it’s now being set aside,” Johnson said. “So I understand there’s some senators that want a little more than that, but in terms of clarification, so I suppose they’re in the process of doing that.”

The DOJ statement Monday said it would “abide by” a temporary court order blocking payouts from the fund. But several Senate Republicans said they wanted further assurances that the fund is defunct.

Johnson said the fund, which could be used to pay prosecuted allies of President Donald Trump, and a proposed $1 billion in Secret Service money that could be used in part for Trump’s ballroom project are “two separate issues.” Blue Light News reported last month that Senate Republicans had decided to drop the security funding entirely.

“But I think they’re both off the table with regard to reconciliation,” he added, referring to the party-line budget process Republicans are using to move the bill.

Johnson met with Trump Monday morning and raised issues about the Anti-Weaponization Fund’s viability given the Senate backlash. Some House Republicans are also opposed to green-lighting the fund and are working to force a vote on legislation to ban any future attempts by Trump or anyone else to create it.

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Congress

Johnson on Pulte

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Speaker Mike Johnson said he is deferring to President Donald Trump on his choice of housing official Bill Pulte as acting director of national intelligence.

“The president has the right to make those confirmations or appointments, and the Senate, you know, has to weigh in as well,” Johnson said in an interview. “So, we’ll see what happens. It’s a very important position.”

Asked if he was concerned Pulte doesn’t have intelligence experience, Johnson shook his head no.

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Koch-aligned PAC launches first big Senate ad buy — and includes Montana

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The Koch-aligned GOP super PAC Americans for Prosperity Action is putting $6.3 million into battleground Senate ads just a few weeks after warning the Republican Senate majority is “at risk.”

The ads — shared first with Blue Light News — are focused heavily on gas prices and affordability, something the group has warned Democrats will take advantage of in November if Republicans don’t present solutions for voters.

The ad buys show that the group is worried about defending Republicans in some very red states. They’re advertising in Montana, which has barely been on the radar for most campaign analysts, as well as Iowa and Ohio, states that President Donald Trump won by double digits in 2024. The group is also running ads in Michigan, New Hampshire and North Carolina.

“Across these six states, voters are telling us the same thing at every door: they want to know who’s going to lower their grocery bill and bring down the cost of gas,” AFP Action Executive Director Nathan Nascimento said in a statement. “The candidates we’re supporting have real plans to do exactly that, and they stand in stark contrast to the progressive policies that have only made things worse. That’s the choice, and we’re going to make sure voters see it clearly.”

The PAC is spending the most in Michigan and Ohio, with $1.7 million in each. The other states have investments ranging from $500,000 to $800,000.

“Things are tough. Gas prices are too high and Ohio families are feeling it. But with Sherrod Brown back in the Senate, high prices would be the new normal,” a narrator says in one of the ads airing in Ohio.

The ad, notably, makes no reference to the war in Iran, which has driven up gas prices nationwide. But the ad shows how Republicans will work to blame the rising costs on Democrats in an effort to keep control in Washington.

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Capitol agenda: Trump officials try to calm ‘slush’ fund fury

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Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche has a chance Tuesday to convince Republicans he’s dropping plans for a controversial $1.8 billion “Anti-Weaponization Fund.”

But it’s unclear if members of his party will be swayed enough to unjam President Donald Trump’s larger agenda.

Senate Republicans — enough of whom returned from recess still furious about the pot of money — will discuss the status of the fund during a closed-door lunch Tuesday, according to several Republican senators.

Hours later Blanche is set to testify to House appropriators certain to grill him on his statements last month that the fund could be used to pay people who attacked the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.

That testimony set off a furor that scuttled planned votes on separate legislation to fund agencies such as Immigration and Customs Enforcement for the remainder of Trump’s presidency.

Republican senators, including some top leaders, said a Justice Department statement Monday that it would “abide by” a federal judge’s ruling to temporarily halt any payouts of the fund was not enough to calm concerns.

“It’s pretty clear that the president has to say very explicitly that there’s not going to be a weaponization fund,” Senate Judiciary Chair Chuck Grassley told reporters.

“The reconciliation bill looks like a broken arm with the bones sticking out,” said Sen. John Kennedy. “It won’t move this week, in my opinion, unless we have some resolution on the weaponization fund.”

Also testifying Tuesday is Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin, who is expected to underscore for Senate Appropriations the urgency in passing the larger $70 billion funding package for immigration enforcement agencies.

Senate Majority Leader John Thune said he believed the DOJ statement made it “clear that they’re not proceeding with the fund,” but leaders are “still sorting through” whether the statement was sufficient to satisfy members.

Several GOP senators didn’t close the door when asked about adding language related to the fund to the current party-line bill or supporting separate legislation. And some Senate Republicans could still vote to add a preemptive ban to the funding bill or support amendments — along with Democrats who label it a “slush” fund — that would limit or nix the account, four Republican aides acknowledged.

Such a step, if it’s not explicitly backed by Trump, could threaten to sink the overall bill.

Thune said that Republicans should know by Tuesday if they are going to be able to revive the immigration enforcement bill this week.

What else we’re watching: 

— JOHNSON CAN’T STIFLE IRAN WAR POWERS DEFECTORS: Speaker Mike Johnson and House GOP leaders are all but certain they can’t stave off handing Trump an embarrassing loss this week on his military campaign in Iran. A critical mass of Republicans are poised to break ranks and vote with Democrats to rein in Trump’s ability to continue the Iran war, according to three people granted anonymity to discuss private talks.

— PLATNER’S SENATE FAN CLUB STANDS FIRM AMID SCANDALS: Senators who have backed Maine Senate Democratic candidate Graham Platner are dismissing concerns that a litany of potentially damaging stories could endanger the party’s prospects to pick up the seat.Platner is set to meet with a group of Democratic senators in Washington Tuesday after new reporting surfaced over the weekend that he exchanged sexual text messages with other women while married.

Meredith Lee Hill, Jessica Piper, Lisa Kashinsky and Andrew Howard contributed to this report.

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