Loading summary
A
Foreign. 2026 Metropolitan Police Department officer Daniel Hodges and former U.S. capitol Police officer Harry Dunn sued President Donald J. Trump, Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche and Treasury Secretary Scott Besant today to block the creation of the fund to pay off those convicted of crimes related to the January 2021 attack on the US Capitol. The lawsuit begins in the most brazen act of presidential corruption this century, President Donald J. Trump has created a 1.776 billion dollar taxpayer funded slush fund to finance the insurrectionists and paramilitary groups that commit violence in his name, the suit continues. The fund is illegal. No statute authorizes its creation. The settlement on which it is premised is a corrupt sham and its design violates the Constitution and federal law. Both Hodges and Dunn defended the Capitol and the lawmakers in it. On January 6, Hodges was the man in the infamous photograph of the rioters crushing a police officer between metal doors. The officers claim the standing to sue because they have had to live with death threats and harassment since January 6th from MAGA Republicans and the plan to pay off rioters will both compensate and empower the very people making those threats. Militias like the Proud Boys will use money from the Fund to arm and equip themselves. The Fund will grant their past acts of violence legal imprimatur. And most chillingly, the Fund will signal to past and potential future perpetrators of violence against Dun and Hodges that they need not fear prosecution. To the contrary, they should expect to be rewarded. The lawsuit covers what actually happened at the Capitol on January 6, 2021, beginning shortly after noon when rioters tried to break into the building to stop the counting of the electoral electoral votes that would make Democrat Joe Biden president. Hours of hand to hand combat ensued, the lawsuit recounts, as police officers tried to prevent the rioters from entering the building and killing elected officials and their staff. On the west front of the Capitol, rioters broke down barriers made of bike racks, signs and snow fencing and pushed forward to a line of police officers. Rioters attacked officers, sprayed them with chemicals and hit them with pipes, tools and the bike racks and stolen police equipment that were now strewn about. After 2 o', clock, the rioters broke through the line of officers, smashed windows and forced their way into the building, opening the doors for their comrades. As rioters stocked the halls, staffers, journalists and and members of Congress hid in offices, hoping not to be found by people screaming Hang Mike Pence and Where's Nancy? They forced their way into the Senate chamber just minutes after Vice President Mike Pence left it. Meanwhile, officers continued to fight against the advancing mob rioters punched police, speared them with flagpoles, attacked them with Tasers and stolen riot shields, and tried to drag them into the crowd. For three hours, in the enclosed tunnel connecting the Capitol to the inaugural stage, rioters engaged in an almost medieval style of combat, pushing exhausted and outnumbered police to get into the building in a heave ho rhythm, nearly crushing officers as they did through all of this. Amid the fighting and screaming, flashbangs exploded, fire retardant shot into the air and chemical spray filled the tunnel. Many officers were injured in this fight to defend this entrance, some gravely Hodges was hit from above with a heavy object, kicked in the chest and driven to the ground. Shortly thereafter, a rioter grabbed Hodges by the face and tried to gouge out his eyes. Hodges shook him off and eventually made his way to the tunnel connecting the Capitol building to the inaugural stage. There, he joined in some of the most furious fighting that day as police tried to stop the mass of rioters from flooding into the building. In the rushing crowd of the mob, Hodges was nearly crushed between metal doors by the enraged attackers. He later said that he thought this could be the end. After several hours, National Guard forces, including from Virginia and Maryland, helped the officers to get control and expel the rioters from the Capitol. The lawsuit recounts the events of the day in detail, making it clear exactly who it is that Trump wants to Reward with almost $2 billion in taxpayer money. Hodges and Dunn are not the only people going after what is not just the most brazen act of presidential corruption this century, but the most brazen act of presidential corruption in American history, by far. In the House, Representative Jamie Raskin, a Democrat of Maryland, today introduced the no Taxpayer Funded Settlement Slush Funds act of 2026, which would prohibit the use of federal funds to pay off anyone claiming to have faced weaponization of the law by the federal government, including any of the January 6th rioters. Congress must reassert the power of the purse and stop this brazen looting of taxpayer funds before this pilot program for massive partisan corruption becomes the permanent operating system of our government. Raskin said Democrats also demanded the Department of Justice preserve any and all documents and communications about the agreement. Scott McFarlane of Midas Touch reported that even Republicans hate the slush fund and non prosecution agreement, telling Nicole Wallace of Ms. Now there are so many Republicans coming out against this thing. It appears to me this slush fund is like as popular as poison ivy. Nobody is claiming ownership of this thing. I have zero statements of support for this fund from any congressional Republican. Yesterday, before news broke of Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche's addendum to the original agreement. Senate Judiciary Committee Democrats Adam Smith of California, Dick Durbin of Illinois and Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut sent a memo to the Department of Justice asking whether Blanche was following the advice of ethics lawyers in the department in his handling of issues having to do with Trump, as he had promised to do in his confirmation hearings. Lawyer George Conway posted that Blanche never intended to carry out that promise. It is clear that members of the Trump administration never intended to honor the Constitution or serve the American people, raising the question of what exactly they do intend for Trump. Making money is clearly a major part of it. The anger over the slush fund has pushed out of the news a growing outcry over the news from earlier this week that Trump bought and sold at least $220 million in stocks like those of Nvidia, Apple, Tesla and Microsoft, while making policy and public announcements that affected the value of those stocks. Trump is also into building monuments to himself in the nation's capital the repainted reflecting pool in front of the Lincoln Memorial, the Kennedy center and the triumphal arch behind the Lincoln Memorial that would frame the home of Confederate general Robert E. Lee. At Arlington National Cemetery, Trump has paid special attention to the ballroom he intends to build on the site where the east wing of the White House used to be, saying it will be done by September 2028. Republicans tried to get $1 billion put into a reconciliation bill to fund what Trump claimed was security measures for the ballroom. Unlike most measures that come before the Senate, a reconciliation bill cannot be filibustered and so needs only 51 votes rather than 60 to pass. But Democrats recently stopped that Republican plan by noting that Republicans failed to give the required instructions to all the relevant committees. The Senate parliamentarian agreed with them and said the request could not go into a budget reconciliation measure. Senate Republicans, who were uncomfortable with the request anyway, removed it. Trump apparently did not get the memo. Today, he insisted that Republicans replace the Senate parliamentarian with a Trump loyalist, his social media account posted. Shockingly, Republicans have kept the very important position of parliamentarian in the hands of a woman, Elizabeth McDonough, who was appointed long ago by Barack Hussein Obama and a vicious lunatic known as Senator Harry Reid, who ran the Senate for the Democrats with an iron fist. Over the years. She has been brutal to Republicans, but not to the Democrats. So why has she not been replaced? He went on to demand the Senate force through the Save America act that would significantly restrict voting and to call for the Senate to kill the filibuster, which would give us everything, he went on. If we don't pass at least one of these two provisions quickly, you will never see another Republican president again. But Senate Republicans are signaling they may not want to play ball with a president whose approval ratings showed up today at an abysmal 34% and who is demanding loyalty to himself alone rather than working for the party. On Meet the Press Sunday, Senator Lindsey Graham, a Republican of South Carolina, reacted to the defeat of Senator Bill Cassidy in Louisiana's Republican primary after Trump backed his rival by saying, this is the party of Donald Trump. Trump made that clear yesterday when, after waffling for months, he endorsed Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton in a primary runoff over Senator John Cornyn's seat to be held next week. Trump called Paxton a true MAGA warrior and complained that Cornyn was not supportive of me when times were tough. Bloomberg reporter Stephen T. Dennis noted that Democratic Senate candidate James Talarico has to be doing the happy dance. This is going like Democrats would have scripted it, dennis wrote. A late Trump endorsement after Cornyn and Senate Republicans incinerated about $100 million trying to nuke Ken Paxton as an impeached adulterer who violated ethics left and right. House Republicans have also borne the pressure of Trump's wrath. Yesterday, Representative Thomas Massie, a Republican of Kentucky who helped to lead the charge for the release of the Epstein files, lost his primary to a Trump backed challenger in what was the most expensive House primary ever. Ed Gallrain, who won the primary, vows that he will do whatever Trump tells him to. Trump backed primary candidates also won in Georgia and Alabama. White House spokesperson Steven Cheung posted, Do not ever doubt President Trump and his political power around. Find out. But as political commentator Jessica Tarlov noted, Massie's district went for Trump by 35 points in 2024, but Gallerain won by just 10 points after outside money spent an astronomical $35 million on the race. When winning a primary usually costs between $100,000 and $500,000. Tarlov added that Trump isn't offering much of a platform for Republicans to run on. She said it's basically I want absolute loyalty. I want to trade stocks, make hundreds of millions of dollars. I want my 1776 fund to make sure J6ers, you know, get the money that they're owed. I want immunity for me and my family from an audit forevermore. I want to get rich and I don't care that you are poorer.
B
Letters from an American was written and read by Heather Cox Richardson. It was produced at Soundscape Productions, Dedham, MA. Recorded with music composed by Michael Moss.
Podcast: Letters from an American
Host: Heather Cox Richardson
Date: May 22, 2026
In this episode, Heather Cox Richardson delves into the political and historical significance of newly uncovered controversies surrounding President Donald J. Trump’s creation of a massive taxpayer-funded slush fund intended for January 6 Capitol rioters. Through a narrated newsletter, Richardson unpacks the legal, ethical, and political battles ignited by this fund, the bipartisan backlash, and its broader implications for American democracy, power structures, and the Republican Party’s internal struggles.
Stock Trades (11:40): Coverage of Trump’s $220 million in stock trades (Nvidia, Apple, Tesla, Microsoft) while in office, raising serious conflict-of-interest alarms.
Monuments and Spending (12:00): Trump pushes for lavish federal projects—personal monuments, a repainted reflecting pool, a triumphal arch, and a White House ballroom, for which Republicans sought a nearly $1 billion budget allocation via reconciliation (circumvented by Democrats and the Senate parliamentarian).
Manipulating Senate Procedures (13:00): Trump demands loyalty from Republican Senators, calling for the replacement of Parliamentarian Elizabeth McDonough, and attacks her appointment and supposed bias.
Senate Power Plays: Trump’s demands include passing the “Save America Act” (restricting voting rights) and killing the filibuster to guarantee Republican dominance.
Republican Resistance: Republicans are hesitant to yield as Trump’s approval falls to 34% and he increasingly prioritizes personal loyalty over party unity.
Recent Primaries (14:00): Trump's hand-picked candidates win several primaries, despite internal GOP frustration and record-breaking campaign spending.
Heather Cox Richardson offers a thorough and harrowing recounting of both the chaos and violence of January 6 and the ongoing political fallout as Trump seeks to reward loyalists, subvert institutional checks, and convert public funds for personal and partisan aims. The episode provides an incisive look at the present crisis, internal GOP tensions, and the critical legal and legislative battles shaping this election-year moment.