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Judge Blocks Paxton’s ActBlue Suit, Donor-Vetting Claims Untested
A retaliation finding halts the Texas case before its central fraud allegations ever face a courtroom
A retaliation finding halts the Texas case before its central fraud allegations ever face a courtroom
A law built to deliver justice for survivors met a county that couldn't contest a single claim
An Ohio takedown shows proven theft where USDA got state records; the headline national figure rests on data the agency admits it can't verify — and 21 states are fighting in court to keep it that way.
The acting attorney general said the fund was dead. The president said "I love it." The Senate is voting anyway.
A federal judge ordered Trump to answer fraud allegations by June 12 and paused his anti-weaponization fund — a case where the president sued an agency he runs and the two sides never fought.
Hours after a judge stripped his name and froze his renovation, the president said he'll hand the institution to Congress rather than run it on the court's terms.
Trump sued the agency he runs, then settled it into a $1.78B fund the judge never saw.
Brian Morrissey resigned the same day acting AG Todd Blanche announced a Justice Department fund to compensate alleged victims of "lawfare," settling a lawsuit Trump filed against his own government.