Saturday, July 18, 2026

"If he won’t save me, why should I keep his secrets?"

 


You’ll forgive the candor, but I’ve seen this particular opera before. The overture is dissonant; the soprano’s drunk, and someone has barricaded the emergency exits. What we’re witnessing is not an explosion. Not yet.

It’s pressure. The kind of pressure that builds slowly in a steel drum over a blue flame, hissing, rumbling, waiting for the weakest weld to split like a politician’s alibi. The MAGA faithful may have been promised a cleansing fire, but what’s rising isn’t righteous fury. It’s something far more dangerous: expectation laced with betrayal. 

My theory, if you’ll indulge it, is rather simple. Ghislaine Maxwell—yes, her—was sold a dream. A vile, cynical, and deliciously transactional dream. That if she kept her mouth shut through her trial, through prison, through the ritual shaming on the cover of tabloids she once hired photographers for, Donald J. Trump would return to power and, at precisely the right moment, make it all go away. A pardon. A clean slate. A golden parachute sewn together with denial and a wink. And for a while… it worked. She stayed quiet. Trump won. Or claimed he won.

Pam Bondi, Christopher Wray, Dan Bongino—yes, that’s how you pronounce it, like a failed pasta dish—began priming the base. Whispering sweet nothings into MAGA’s ear about how there never really was on an Epstein list, how the whole affair was a fabrication of the Clintons and the liberal elite. A psych-op. Smoke. Mirrors. Because the goal, always, was to prep the battlefield. To soften the edges of outrage. So that when the pardon came—wrapped in red, white, and a flaming Twitter post—it would be seen not as complicity but as justice.

But now? Now the whole thing’s blown a goddamn gasket. The narrative snapped. The list exists. The documentation exists. The tapes may very well exist. And Ghislaine, poor doomed Ghislaine, is sitting in her cell doing mental arithmetic with one equation: "If he won’t save me, why should I keep his secrets?"

Trump CAN’T pardon her. Not now. Not without confirming every fear, every accusation, every whisper in every basement bar and comment thread in America. To do so would be to stand on the gallows and wave a flag that says: Yes, I was in on it.

But if he doesn’t? If he tries to pivot, distract, throw Rosie O’Donnell under a bus or start a war in Patagonia to change the subject—at some juncture soon Maxwell will sing. Not just warble. Not just suggest. She’ll scream. She’ll torch every bridge and dance in the embers, and the whole rotted scaffolding will come down.

Which brings us to Pam Bondi and the gang. Up till now, their job was simple: look the other way. Pretend not to notice the smell from the basement. But now, to save him, they’d have to start committing active, prosecutable felonies. Destroying evidence. Lying under oath. Obstructing investigations they no longer control. And here’s the kicker: the Supreme Court may have given Trump temporary sanctuary, but they aren’t protected. Not even a little.

And they’re beginning to realize, with the exquisite clarity of someone holding a grenade with the pin already pulled, that Donald Trump will let them drown before he risks getting his cuffs wet. He’s in a lifeboat—yes—but it’s built for eight and he’s armed with an oar, cracking skulls to keep it balanced. He promised safety, and now they’re treading water, watching him drift away.

And what happens when the frog in the pot realizes the water’s boiling? Either she gets fried and served with a side of plausible deniability… Or she jumps. And if she jumps, she burns the whole goddamn kitchen down…"

-Robert Hawks, writing for "Democrats, Republicans and Independents Against Trump and Trumpism"


Trump’s Speech About 2020 Proved He Was a Loser — and Still Is


Thursday night’s self-ballyhooed presidential address was the same old Donald Trump. Six years on, he still refuses to accept the clear and unambiguous fact that he lost the 2020 election. Thursday’s speech was the same desperate claims — this time from the East Room in the White House. No wonder almost every respectable network refused to carry it, with CBS — now owned by his enablers the Ellisons — a notable exception.

Pay close attention: Trump didn’t claim that there was any actual interference in voting or election results. At no point did Trump say or point to any evidence that a single vote was changed or altered. Indeed, even White House conspiracy theorist John Solomon admitted as much to reporters afterwards. That’s because it did not happen. Audits, recounts, certifications, federal investigations, and more than 80 judges, including those appointed by Trump himself, have all uniformly rejected his attacks on the 2020 election. What we got instead on Thursday was a rehash of four myths, all of which fall apart on close examination.

Myth #1: Purported Vulnerabilities in Electronic Voting and Ballot-Counting Systems

Trump spoke broadly about vulnerabilities in voting machines, but he did not say there is evidence that voting machines or votes were breached. And that’s because they weren’t. He wants to scare you with the hypothetical, but truth is that our election officials put safeguards in place to minimize any vulnerabilities. Their dedicated work and vigilance ensure our elections work as intended, protected from technological exploitation.

Myth #2: China’s Acquisition of American Voter Data

This is a scare tactic. Trump made wild claims about the compromise of election data, but let’s be clear: He did not say that votes were exploited or compromised. The voter registration data he is in a twist about actually consists of basic and publicly available data such as names and addresses — far less personal information than what the average American shares when ordering clothes on Temu.

Myth #3: Michigan Voter-Registration Investigation

Again, there was zero evidence of voting fraud here. Trump didn’t point to any and can’t. Though there were isolated cases of irregularities in registration, local election officials flagged them in real time. Our elections systems worked as intended to unearth them. This is a backhanded endorsement, not a critique.

Myth #4: Noncitizens on State Voter Rolls

Trump has made these wild claims of folks improperly registering over and over again using baseless allegations and wrong lists, such as the error-ridden and oft-abused Department of Homeland Security SAVE databases. The truth is that Americans follow voter registration laws and cast ballots in good faith, as we documented in our Democracy Defenders Action report with LULAC on The Big Lie.

Then there was the avalanche of documents Trump said would prove him right. They did just the opposite. For example, they show Russia, not China, was working to interfere in the 2020 election — to help Trump! If all of this is the best he and the election deniers have, they are in trouble.

Thursday was a flop — a predictable one. One of us (Norm) was asked by cable TV to do a curtain raiser for the speech. The forecast was for a comically loony mishmash along the lines of other famous conspiracy theories, and boy did Trump deliver.

Trump lost in 2020. This will remain true no matter how many pieces of bogus evidence he invents or floats. The truth is Trump and his fellow election deniers are not just trying to prove bizarre counterfactuals about prior elections. They’re trying to fool us into doubting the next one... 

More from The Contrarian: Department of Injustice

Trump’s Cronyism Signals a Chilling — and Familiar — Story

Brian Tyler Cohen analyzed how Trump’s corruption is following an all-too-familiar global playbook — Putin’s — and what we need to do to step out of Russia’s post-Soviet footsteps. “If the next Democratic administration doesn’t take note and prosecute the criminals of today to the fullest extent of the law, then that criminality is doomed to repeat itself.”

The Tea ft. Alphonso David

Global Black Economic Forum President Alphonso David joined April Ryan to talk about Lindsey Graham’s Senate replacement, Trump’s renewed attacks on Georgia’s senators, and what a Todd Blanche DOJ would mean for minority and underserved communities.

Trump DOJ’s NYT Subpoenas Are the Latest Encroachment on Press Freedom

Josh Levs wrote on the latest moves of an administration actively hostile to a free press and how coverage has fallen short by ignoring the history of reporter subpoenas. “It’s crucial information because it shows the media’s successful track record in fighting back.”

Trump’s Lawyers Should Be Sanctioned

Erwin Chemerinsky argued — apropos of a federal judge shutting down Trump’s outrageous IRS lawsuit this week — that all lawyers complicit in Trump’s abuses of power should expect repercussions for egregious misconduct. “Abuses of the legal system, even at the direction of the president, are unacceptable.” […].

-Norman Eisen and Sarah Jackel, The Contrarian

 

Friday, July 17, 2026

Canadian Fires

 













Don’t get me wrong, I love my American friends. But seeing people complain about the wildfire smoke coming from Canada is hard when so many of us are living through this.

I live in Ontario, and these fires are devastating. Entire communities have been evacuated. Families have lost their homes. Emergency responders and volunteers are risking their lives every day, and countless animals have lost their habitats. People are dying. Animals are dying. Homes are gone.

The smoke reaching the U.S. is the result of a much bigger tragedy. I completely understand that the poor air quality is frustrating, but please remember that on the other side of that smoke are people who have lost everything.

A little compassion goes a long way. Instead of blaming Canada… let’s hope for rain, support those affected, and keep our first responders, families, and wildlife in our thoughts. 

-Tay Spicer


We are facing the biggest test of our democracy since the Civil War

The real message to be drawn from Trump’s address to the nation is that he will call into question the votes of every state and city that chooses a Democratic senator or representative in the 2026 midterm elections. He’ll push Republican governors and mayors not to certify the results. He’ll demand recounts and audits.

We’ve been here before, but this time he’s even less restrained than he was in 2020 and is surrounded by people who will do his bidding. His address tonight was absurd. It was riddled with so many lies that I’m reluctant to dignify them with rebuttals, but you should have them.

He mentioned a newly-declassified investigation into a voter registration group in Muskegon, Mich. that apparently had invited fraudulent registrations in 2020 — but Trump didn’t mention that the applications had been caught and none of them had resulted in any ballots being sent out incorrectly. The F.B.I. closed the investigation, stating “the investigation to date did not identify a criminal violation or a priority threat to national security.”

He alleged, once again, that foreign powers have hijacked votes, or that federal or state officials plotted to rig the 2020 election. But no evidence has ever emerged showing that vote counts have been manipulated or corrupted. Intelligence reports, state audits of vote tallies and lawsuits have repeatedly affirmed official results in 2020 and other years. 

Nothing suggests China manipulated votes. Instead, U.S. intelligence assessment says China “probably also continued longstanding efforts” to gather information on U.S. voters and public opinion and to use that information to influence U.S. policy “as it has during all election cycles since at least 2008.”

The most significant foreign influence operations occurred in the 2016 presidential election and were conducted by Russia, in favor of Trump, according to the Mueller report. To the extent that this and other reports appeared to cast doubt on the legitimacy of Trump’s victory, they have had the effect of fueling his distrust of U.S. intelligence agencies.

Despite his repeated assertions that U.S. elections are not secure, Trump during his second term has significantly cut the budget of the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, including its election work. That’s because Trump grew contemptuous of the agency, and the government’s election security work generally, after it validated the integrity of the 2020 election.

So, the entire performance tonight was fake — an extension of his Big Lie that the 2020 election was “stolen” from him. It was also a commercial for the “Save America Act,” which would make it harder for many American citizens to vote. 

Voters would have to prove their citizenship in person upon registering to vote, with documents such as an enhanced form of REAL ID (a state ID card compliant with federal regulations) that indicates American citizenship; a birth certificate; a passport or military identification card.

An estimated 9 percent of eligible voters, or 21.3 million Americans, either do not have documents that prove their citizenship, such as passports and birth certificates, or cannot retrieve them in a day or less, according to a study by the Center for Democracy and Civic Engagement at University of Maryland and the Brennan Center for Justice. And 45 states do not issue the kind of enhanced driver’s license indicating citizenship status that would be needed to verify voting eligibility.

The point is that American democracy is acutely endangered by a sociopath who will stop at nothing to get the results he wants. This means that you and I and every other patriotic American have to do whatever we can to ensure free and fair elections, and fight Trump’s torrent of lies and authoritarian moves. If you’re anything like me, you’re warn out by Trump. You’d like nothing better than to tune him out. I get it. But American democracy is seriously on the line here. We must keep up — and accelerate — the fight.

-Robert Reich


Thursday, July 16, 2026

Academic Freedom Advocates Stand Up at Yale: Democracy does not defend itself


It is all too common, as Anne Applebaum wrote of Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, for a Republican politician to “abandon his previous ideals, to bury the patriotism that was once so important to him, and to become, instead, a loud, opportunistic collaborator.” We have seen a horde of figures in civil society make their Faustian bargain with Donald Trump and his authoritarian, white supremacist regime. However, for those in positions of responsibility in academe, Big Law, media, and business, there is an alternative to slavish careerism and unbridled ambition to climb the inner rungs of power.

Even when elite institutions appear ready to buckle, individuals and groups with modest financial resources and limited legal protections have proven that they can stand up — at great risk to themselves— and shame the accommodationists, thereby slowing the rush to collaborate with a tyrannical regime. 

The contrast between feeble ingratiators and principled dissenters has been especially vivid in the realm of higher education. Harvard, Penn, and a batch of elite universities have compromised academic independence and thrown diversity under the bus to ward off Trump regime threats to slash funding by signing off on agreements that compromise academic independence, allow government oversight, forfeit efforts to recruit a diverse student population, and cede protection for vulnerable LBGTQ+ students.

These sorts of agreements, which have been imposed at Penn and the University of Virginia, have been roundly condemned for abrogating First Amendment rights and academic freedom, two cornerstones of our democracy. “These agreements are vague, contradictory and contain unlawful terms that subject universities to ongoing legal jeopardy,” wrote two Yale alums currently teaching at Penn. “For example, following Virginia’s policy could imperil Yale’s laudable efforts to expand access to low-income and first-generation college students.” 

Some of these extortionist deals have limited foreign student enrollment and forced schools to discriminate against trans students. They’ve also opened a Pandora’s box of ongoing litigation. “Provisions that conflict with the law and with one another expose institutions to liability from all directions. Also, the use of vague terms such as DEI, gender ideology, and domestic terrorism bolsters executive discretion and invites overcompliance.”

Last month, we learned that the Trump regime was “conducting a far-reaching investigation into whether Yale University’s admissions practices violate anti-discrimination laws, prompting one of the country’s most elite schools to pursue settlement talks with the government,” the New York Times reported

The Justice Department, as it has time and again, has speciously claimed that efforts to expand diversity amount to illegal discrimination. In this case, DOJ is not only attempting to bully the medical school (the focus of its original allegations of “illegal preferential treatment to Black and Hispanic applicants”), but also the law school and undergraduate programs. Not everyone at Yale, however, has been willing to roll over and play dead.

Yale Law School (Credit: CHUYN)

Fortunately, Yale’s law school dean and other faculty are leading the charge against the latest infringement on academic freedom and the crusade against diversity. “The dean, Cristina M. Rodríguez, and a group of law school faculty members have quietly lobbied top Yale leaders in recent days, arguing that the Trump administration cannot be trusted, and that settling would threaten the rule of law and the university’s reputation,” the New York Times reported. “They have even explored whether the law school could be excluded from any settlement with the federal government. Students, faculty, and alumni have been openly pressuring Yale President Maurie McInnis,” a sign that Rodríguez has a reservoir of support.

In an insightful interview with the Yale Daily News, Yale alum and former FTC commissioner Rebecca Slaughter (whom MAGA Supreme Court justices ruled that the president had unlimited power to fire without cause), reminded the Yale community that “it cannot be that I, Becca, normal human, had the wherewithal to challenge something that was wrong and an abuse of power, and Yale — with its $44 billion endowment — does not.” She acknowledged, “It’s not fun to push back — it’s much nicer to sort of think about how to walk away or make it go away in the short term — but it’s so much better in the long term to stand on principle,” adding that “especially as an academic institution, I think Yale has an incredible obligation to do that, and that obligation is to its students, to its alumni, to its faculty, to its employees, to its partners.”

Courage may prove contagious at Yale, where an array of groups — including the Yale College Council, Yale College Democrats, the Yale chapter of the American Association of University Professors, and an alumni group “Stand Up for Yale” — have mobilized to put the kibosh on capitulation. Yale’s chapter of AAUP put out a letter declaring, “The choice before Yale is not simply whether to settle one investigation. It is whether to participate in a broader campaign to turn civil rights enforcement into a mechanism of political control.”

On Friday, Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-CT) spoke at Yale alongside Yale students, alums, professors, and Mayor Justin Elicker to push back against collaboration. “We’re at a legacy-defining moment,” Blumenthal said. “Yale will be regarded either as a beacon and a fighter for academic freedom or as the weakling who succumbed and obeyed.”

Whether defenders of academic freedom can prevail at Yale or not, the concerted effort to object to spineless capitulation and force institutional elites to justify their actions is critical in the fight for democracy, preservation of First Amendment rights, and defense of civil society. When elites learn that capitulation will spark fierce criticism and exact lasting personal and institutional cost, they are much less likely to engage in Quisling behavior and more inclined, however reluctantly, to resist authoritarian intimidation.

As the Trump administration and its MAGA enablers now face frequent legal setbacks and edge closer to a potentially devastating midterm election, it is especially critical for democracy advocates to hold the line, refuse to give away precious democratic ground, and deny the Trump crowd any easy wins. Now, more than ever, it is time for Yale, higher education, and civil society as a whole to keep their nerve and refuse to voluntarily concede critical freedoms to a faltering fascist regime growing more desperate by the day to cling to power.

-Jennifer Rubin, The Contrarian is community-supported. Help fund bold journalism and critical lawsuits to stop Trump’s corruption by becoming a paid subscriber. Join the fight now.

 

Wednesday, July 15, 2026

Confirming Blanche Might Finish Off Republicans’ Careers

 


Senate Republicans who vote to confirm Todd Blanche for attorney general should take heed: They will be haunted for the rest of their careers (some of which may very well end with the midterms) by the courageous survivors of Jeffrey Epstein’s monstrous crimes.

CNN reported that last week 19 Epstein victims “responded to The New York Times’s reporting that Blanche and other senior officials participated in Situation Room meetings to discuss how to respond to growing pressure for more transparency as the issue became a public relations crisis for the administration.” The survivors’ statement read in part:

"We are deeply disturbed to learn that so many senior members of the administration gathered in the Situation Room to discuss the release of the Epstein files as a reputational problem, rather than an opportunity to pursue investigative leads and try to figure out what actually happened."

The reporting, they said, only confirmed their “worst fears about the administration prioritizing political expediency over justice for survivors and truth for the American people.” And they blasted Blanche, who “has consistently minimized legitimate concerns about how the files have been handled, including problematic redactions and the exposure of survivors’ personal information.” They concluded that he “failed to deliver transparency, and he has gravely failed survivors.” (Their jab that promoting him to AG would “failing upward, plain and simple” aptly describes the Trump DEI program for elevating unqualified, ethically deficient white males to top posts.)

Even before Blanche’s nomination, Republicans were under siege for their handling of the Epstein files. But Trump’s nomination of Blanche amounts to a gratuitous slam at Epstein victims, puts the issue back in the news, and forces Republicans (many past the primary season) to decide: Save their own careers or promote Blanche?

The perpetually concerned but never courageous Sen. Susan Collins (R-ME) is infamous for Trump-friendly votes when it matters (e.g., acquitting Donald Trump in the first impeachment trial; confirming obvious opponents of Roe v. Wade for the Supreme Court; sending the big, ugly bill to the floor when she could have stopped it in its tracks). She has been at her most spineless in rubber-stamping unfit, unqualified, and morally decrepit Cabinet members such as Robert F. Kennedy Jr. for Health and Human Services secretary, Tulsi Gabbard for director of national intelligence, and Pam Bondi for attorney general. Would Collins now double down and confirm yet another Trump stooge over the objections of Epstein survivors?

Surely, even she understands that a vote to confirm Epstein victims’ nemesis could be a career-ender. If “character” is what Republicans want to talk about in Maine, Democrats may be more than willing to engage. (Indeed, Democratic Senate nominee Graham Platner wasted no time last week making an issue of Republicans’ support for the “Epstein class.”)

Collins’ biggest problem may be finding enough colleagues willing to take the heat for voting to confirm Blanche so she can duck (i.e. vote no without imperiling Blanche and incurring Trump’s and MAGA’s wrath). Consider Sen. Jon Husted (R-Ohio), the governor- appointed replacement for now-Vice President JD Vance. It would be wholly foolhardy for him to ignore the Epstein abuse victims’ pleas.

Former Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio) already has put out ads against Husted pointing to Husted’s receipt of six-figure donations from the infamous Ohio billionaire and Republican donor Les Wexner, who hired Epstein as a financial adviser and was named in an FBI email as “co-conspirator” in Epstein’s sex trafficking crimes. (Husted has tried to muddy the waters by fishing around for names in the files who wound up giving to Brown, but, as fact checkers have noted, “[n]one of the donors the Husted campaign identified has been charged with a crime related to Epstein, nor has any been identified as a co-conspirator.”)

Blanche puts Husted on the hot seat: Should he support the Epstein cover-up architect for attorney general when no reasonable voter would believe Blanche is anything but a Trump stooge willing to perpetuate the heinous coverup? Husted could well conclude a “yes” vote for Blanche would doom his already-shaky campaign.

Likewise in Alaska, Blanche’s confirmation fight could very well aggravate Republican Alaska Sen. Dan Sullivan’s own problems with the Epstein cover-up. Sullivan last September joined other Republicans (including Husted and Collins) in blocking a vote (on defense authorization) aimed at forcing release of the files.

As a local Alaska journalist at the time noted, Sullivan blithely declared in a constituent letter, “I trust [!?!] the Department of Justice to carefully consider the release of relevant materials, while simultaneously ensuring that Epstein’s victims remain protected and that legal protocols are upheld.” As absurd as his faith in the Department of Justice was back then, a vote now for the man who thwarted the law and obstructed the release of the files would cement Sullivan’s image that he is Trump rubber stamp who would throw victims under the bus to keep his job.

Finally, even though Texas Sen. John Cornyn will not be on the ballot, Blanche’s confirmation fight is already roiling the race of the man who defeated him, MAGA extremist and scandal-plagued Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton. (Cornyn should consider if he wants one of his last important votes in the Senate to be a tip of the hat to Blanche and a kick in the teeth of Epstein’s victims.)

Houston’s Chron. reported on the ongoing fallout from Paxton’s sweetheart plea deal with Adam Hoffman, who was tried for first-degree sexual abuse of a child. (Seriously, what is it with Republicans cutting deals with accused pedophiles?) Democratic nominee James Talarico emailed the paper: “Adam Hoffman—an admitted child molester—just became a registered sex offender in Nebraska but still doesn’t have to register in Texas because Ken Paxton gave him an Epstein-style sweetheart deal.” Talarico continued: “Hoffmann was supposed to serve 25 years to life, but today he walks free after the most corrupt politician in America put the well-being of pedophiles over the safety of Texas children.”

Yikes. Talarico’s argument (“Does America really need someone who authored his own ‘Epstein-style sweetheart deals‘roaming the halls of Congress”) may hit home even in deep-red Texas. No wonder Republicans would rather talk about veganism and transgender kids; perhaps supporting pedophiles’ victims is a better way to measure masculine virtue.

In short, by insisting on nominating Blanche — already under fire for masterminding the coverup, botching the files’ redaction, and conducting a nefarious interview with Epstein accomplice Ghislaine Maxwell — Trump has again handed Democrats a club to pommel Republicans who cannot resist Trump’s outrageous demands. If cowardly Senate Republicans vote to install Blanche to run DOJ, many voters may well conclude it is time to throw Republican senators out en masse. At some point, all Americans must decide whether to stand with the Epstein and his enablers or with his victims.


The Contrarian is community-supported. Help fund bold journalism and critical lawsuits to stop Trump’s corruption by becoming a paid subscriber. Join the fight now.

 

Tuesday, July 14, 2026

"...It's a $1.776 Billion Fraud on the Court, and on Every American Taxpayer!"

Executive Summary: A federal judge in Miami found that President Trump’s $10 billion lawsuit against the IRS was a sham: because Trump controls the very agencies he sued, there were never two opposing sides, just one man on both, using the court to bless a private deal that would have handed his allies $1.776 billion in taxpayer money and shielded him and his family from future tax audits. The judge ruled the case was filed in “bad faith” for an “improper purpose,” and pointed out that the Justice Department, run by Trump’s own former personal lawyers, abandoned defenses it had won with in every similar case rather than fight its boss. She refused to let anyone treat the deal as a real settlement and referred the lawyers involved, including Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche, for possible discipline.

I read all fifty-six pages of Judge Kathleen M. Williams’ order so you would not have to. I am going to hand you her words, not mine, and let you decide who is telling you the truth. The full order is linked at the end of this article if you’d like to read it.¹

Suing Yourself For Ten Billion Dollars:

Start with the shape of the thing, because the shape gives it away.

Trump, in the words of the order, “served as the 45th President of the United States, and is the 47th President of the United States.” He sued the IRS and the Treasury Department for “at least $10,000.000,000.00.” He filed it in what his lawyers had the nerve to call his “personal capacity,” and later described the case as “ordinary.”

Judge Williams refused to play along. She “decline[d] to adopt or accept the credulous exercise of divorcing President Trump’s current job title from an understanding of what happened here.” On the word “ordinary,” she called it “perhaps the most startling misstatement” in the whole proceeding, and she wrote, “There is nothing ‘ordinary’ about this case; it is the very definition of sui generis.”

And here’s why. The defendants, the IRS and Treasury, sit inside the Executive Branch. The head of that branch is the same man who filed the suit. The judge walked the chain of command one link at a time. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, who also serves as Acting IRS Commissioner, is in the Supreme Court’s words “the President’s alter ego.” IRS CEO Frank Bisignano answers to Bessent. The President removes the IRS Commissioner “at the will of the President,” and the order points out he “has done so as recently as August 2025.”

Here is the moment the whole thing collapses. Trump’s own team already told the Supreme Court these officials “unquestionably exercise[] executive power, and must therefore be controlled by the Chief Executive.” Judge Williams caught it and held them to their own words. They do not get to claim total control in one courtroom and real opposition in another. “No person may sue himself,” she wrote. Trump said the same thing once, about a related matter, and she quoted it right back at him: “I’m suing myself.”

A plaintiff who controls the defendant is staging a play for the court. Courts, the judge reminded everyone, “do not engage in the academic pastime of rendering judgments in favor of persons against themselves.”

Picture it in one line. A president sued himself and tried to hand you the bill.

The Dog That Didn’t Bark:

Here is the detail that should put a knot in your stomach, because it shows this was on purpose.

Every other time someone sued over this same tax leak, the Justice Department came out swinging. In the Griffin case. In the Safe Harbor case. The DOJ “zealously defended the government,” fighting the timing of the claims, fighting the damages, arguing the government was not even the right target. In the judge’s words, “In every case naming the government as a defendant, the DOJ engaged in a vigorous defense.”

Then, one sentence later, she drops the hammer: “That is, every case until the instant litigation.”

In Trump’s case, the government lay down. No answer. No appearance. No pleading of any kind. For 109 days, she found, “no attorney representing the United States filed a notice of appearance or any document indicating the government’s position, interest, or awareness of this matter.”

It gets worse. IRS officials had already written a 25-page memo “that outlined major flaws with Plaintiffs’ claims and listed the various defenses that could be advanced on behalf of Defendants.” The winning arguments were sitting in a drawer. The government had the memo in hand. It folded anyway and put its name to a deal worth $1.776 billion.²

Judge Williams drew the only inference a reasonable person draws. The government “failed to defend this lawsuit or to respond to the Court’s jurisdictional inquiry because its position would not withstand judicial scrutiny and because resolution of the threshold issues identified by the Court would not have favored its preferred outcome to this case.” You hold the winning hand and throw the game. The fix is in.

A Settlement Built to Dodge the Judge:

The way they ended the case is its own scandal.

The judge had already spotted the jurisdiction problem and ordered both sides to brief it. Neither side did. Three days before the deadline, the parties filed a two-page notice of voluntary dismissal, telling the court it “automatically divested the Court of jurisdiction” and “no judicial analysis is appropriate.” Then the DOJ put out a press release with a “settlement agreement” no judge had ever seen, creating an “Anti-Weaponization Fund” to be paid out of the Treasury’s Judgment Fund for $1.776 billion.

The day after the dismissal, Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche went before Congress. Someone asked why the settlement never went to the court for review. He answered that “there is no judge” because the case had been dismissed, so there was “no mechanism” for review.

Read how the judge answered that. She was “extremely troubled.” She called his explanation “at best, misleading and, at worst, disingenuous.” Then the clean truth: “The Court was available to review any pleading by any Party at any time during this lawsuit.” If Blanche believed the dismissal was wrong, “he only had to file an appearance and ask for relief.” He never did. Review was the one thing nobody in this deal wanted. The dismissal was the escape hatch.

The Number That Gives It Away:

The payout was set at $1.776 billion. Not 1.7. Not 2. One point seven seven six!

The law for these tax-leak claims allows “$1,000 for each act of unauthorized inspection or disclosure.” The judge noted the plaintiffs “could make no connection between the billions of dollars they sought, and the recovery authorized under the governing statute.” So where did the number come from? She did not have to guess. “Even the Fund amount — $1.776 billion — speaks of a ‘branding’ effort rather than a deliberate and thoughtful calculation of damages.”

A flag-waving number, built for a headline, stapled to grievances the deal never even defined. The judge pointed out the words “Anti-Weaponization” and “Lawfare” were “inchoate,” with no “legal definition… outside their meaning in political discourse.” This was a slogan with a price tag, and you were the one on the hook for it.


The Lawyers and Their Conflicts:

This is where it turns from improper to ugly, and where the order names names.

Look at the signatures. The “settlement” for the plaintiffs was signed by Daniel Epstein, a former White House Senior Associate Counsel and Special Assistant to President Trump. Epstein was never even counsel of record. His promised pro hac vice application never got filed. The judge “can only surmise that Mr. Epstein was aware that he would never need to appear and litigate the merits.” There were no merits to litigate.

The “settlement” for the defendants, supposedly the other side, was signed by Associate Attorney General Stanley Woodward, Jr. and Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche. Read who they are. Woodward represented January 6 defendants and Walt Nauta, Trump’s co-defendant in the Mar-a-Lago classified documents case. Blanche “served as President Trump’s personal criminal defense attorney” in the Mar-a-Lago case, the federal case charging Trump with conspiring to overturn the 2020 election, and the New York “hush money” case.

Now follow the wire, the way the judge did. The settlement funds claims “arising from, inter alia, the Mar-a-Lago Documents Case and the events of January 6, 2021.” Those are the same matters where these same lawyers represented the people who stood to get paid. In her words, instead of “either recusing… because of their previous representations or vigorously defending this lawsuit as required to do so by DOJ policies and procedures, these lawyers agreed to a ‘settlement’ involving a staggering amount of money potentially benefitting former clients.”

She grounded it in the rulebook lawyers answer to. Quoting the commentary to Florida Bar Rule 4-1.11 on government lawyers, she flagged the danger “that power or discretion vested in that agency might be used for the special benefit of the other client,” and “[a] lawyer should not be in a position where benefit to the other client might affect performance of the lawyer’s professional functions on behalf of the government.” Her line: “The specter of that risk seems to be present here.”

She added one more fact. Blanche had reportedly been told to recuse from DOJ matters involving Trump, and a DOJ spokeswoman confirmed he was “recused from many cases.” In this one, “notwithstanding his prior representation of President Trump, Blanche did not recuse.”

Breaking The Laws They Swore To Enforce:

The order goes further and points to the actual statutes and constitutional lines the deal appears to cross.

The Release Order signed by Blanche tried to bar the IRS from ever auditing Trump, his sons, or their companies. Judge Williams pointed to 26 U.S.C. section 7217, a law titled “Prohibition on executive branch influence over taxpayer audits and other investigations,” which makes it “unlawful for any applicable person to request, directly or indirectly,” that the IRS “conduct or terminate an audit.” In her words, the statute “prohibits President Trump and his lawyers, one of whom was former White House Counsel, from asking for or promoting termination of an audit directed toward him. And acquiescing to any such demand is wholly incompatible with the duties of DOJ attorneys… to enforce the law and protect the public interest.”

She flagged the Constitution too. The President’s duty under Article II to “take Care that the Laws be faithfully executed.” The Emoluments limit in Article II, Section 1, keeping a president from taking extra payment during his term, a line “surely known by former White House Counsel and the current Acting Attorney General.” As she put it, “No sitting President has ever sued federal agencies completely subject to his control for monetary benefits… that inure to him, his family, and associates.” No lawyer in the case raised any of it on the docket, which she called “a glaring omission that speaks to the control of the Lead Plaintiff.”

The Tell They Could Not Hide:

If you still need proof the two sides were one side, watch what happened after the deal.

Blanche later testified the DOJ was “not moving forward with the fund, period.” A settlement is a contract between two opposing parties, and one side does not get to erase it alone. As the judge noted, “a party may not unilaterally repudiate a settlement agreement once it is reached.” Blanche’s belief that he could speak for both sides, sign for both sides, then cancel part of it for both sides “demonstrates that there was only one party whose interests were being represented throughout this case.” Around the same time, Trump told reporters he did not know if the fund was “fully dead or just on hold” and would “have to ask the lawyers.” Opposing parties do not share lawyers, and they do not share the same confusion.

And the detail that says everything: the order notes a DOJ official “publicly stated that he intended to apply for compensation from the Fund.” One of the people close to this deal was already reaching for the payout.

Final Analysis:

Let me tell you where this ends up, and then I’ll show you exactly why.

That settlement is finished. Not one dollar is getting paid to anyone. And Trump, his sons, and their companies do not get a permanent pass on IRS audits. An appeal may happen but Trump and sons will lose.

Here is why:

As of today’s ruling, the “settlement” survives only as a private piece of paper the parties can no longer call a settlement or cite in any court; the fund it created has been abandoned and separately blocked; and the audit-immunity provision remains on paper but rests entirely on a unilateral DOJ order the judge found directly contravenes a federal statute.

Stripped of the settlement wrapper, that immunity agreement appears to rest on thin-to-nonexistent consideration flowing from Trump to the government, though that weakness is arguably the least of its problems, because the immunity may also fail for the illegality of its subject matter and for the government’s lack of authority to grant it, and any one of those defects could sink it on its own.

Trump can appeal to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit, arguing that the voluntary dismissal stripped the court of jurisdiction and that the findings and sanctions were improper, though the timing may depend on when the order becomes final, since the sanctions amount is still open. Even then, an appeal faces an uphill climb: Rule 11 and inherent-authority sanctions are reviewed for “abuse of discretion,” a deferential standard under which reversing a 56-page order this detailed is difficult, and pressing the appeal would force the administration to publicly defend a deal that already drew bipartisan criticism.

Why This Lands on You:

The parties told the judge she had no power left, that the dismissal stripped her jurisdiction, that “there is no judge.” She answered that a court keeps the authority to police abuse of its own process, quoting the Eleventh Circuit: “Without them, abuses of the judicial system would go unchecked.” She found the plaintiffs “acted in bad faith and for an improper purpose by ‘collusively filing a lawsuit with claims subject to multiple dispositive defenses solely to provide cover for a collusive settlement.’” She found the case “was brought for an improper purpose — to gain the imprimatur of judicial legitimacy for a ‘settlement’ that had no viable basis in law or fact.” She wrote it flat: the plaintiffs “acted in bad faith.”

Then she acted. She referred Trump’s Florida lawyer, Alejandro Brito, to The Florida Bar. She barred Daniel Epstein from practicing in the district for a year. She forbade the parties from ever again calling this deal a “settlement” in any proceeding. She sent her order to the New York bar, where Blanche is a member, and the District of Columbia bar, where Woodward is a member, noting “disciplinary proceedings are currently ongoing” against them over ethics complaints already filed.

Here is where things stand today, so you have the full picture. The fund was never actually paid out. After bipartisan blowback in Congress, a separate federal judge in Virginia blocked it, and the administration said it was walking away from it. This order goes further and stops the parties from ever using their private deal as a “settlement” blessed by a court. One piece of the deal, the promise shielding Trump and his family from future audits, is the piece the administration has refused to put in writing that it will drop.

She ended with John Adams: “Facts are stubborn things; and whatever may be our wishes, our inclinations, or the dictates of our passions, they cannot alter the state of facts and evidence.” The facts here are stubborn. A president sued the agencies he runs. His former personal lawyers, now running the Justice Department, signed the other side of the deal. They walked away from winning defenses their own colleagues had written down. They tried to lock in $1.776 billion of public money and permanent immunity for the president and his family, and then told Congress “there is no judge” who would ever look.

There was a judge. She looked. She found a case “resolved” before any real fight happened, a lawsuit that “was never about a party seeking judicial resolution of a legal issue or a factual dispute,” and she named it for what it was, a private giveaway laundered through a federal court.

The Justice Department works for you. Its job is to see “that the laws of the United States… be faithfully executed.” Its leaders treated your Treasury like a personal account, your courts like a rubber stamp, and you like someone who would never read the fine print. One judge read every page and said so out loud.

So read this again and remember the one line to carry to anyone. A president sued himself and tried to mail you the bill. Say it at dinner tonight. Send this to the person who swears both parties are the same and none of it touches your life. This reached for your Treasury, your courts, and the promise that the law lands the same on all of us.

You pay what you owe. You now have proof, in fifty-six pages, that someone at the top decided he never would. Do not let this become normal. Talk about it. Share it. Blanche faces the Senate this week for the job of Attorney General on a permanent basis. Ask the people who represent you where they stand and make them answer before the next gavel falls!

-Mitch Jackson, Esq.

PRESIDENT DONALD J. TRUMP, et al., Plaintiffs, v. INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, et al., Defendants.

Tony Soprano Called — He Wants His $1.776 Billion Shakedown Back

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