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President Trump Defends One Billion Dollar Ballroom Plan as DOJ Unveils Contentious Anti-Weaponization Fund

Shouting over the deafening clatter of heavy machinery, President Donald Trump led White House journalists on an unexpected outdoor press tour of the active ballroom construction site on Tuesday. Standing on a temporary platform overlooking the footprint of the former East Wing, the President fiercely mounted a public defense of his signature architectural project, which has recently hit a significant legislative roadblock on Capitol Hill.

The administration is currently seeking one billion dollars in taxpayer funds to secure the White House campus and fortify the new facility. While the President reiterated that the baseline 400 million dollar construction cost of the ballroom is financed entirely by private donors, the massive taxpayer-funded security request has ignited a fierce budget battle. The funding request stalled after the Senate parliamentarian ruled it could not be bundled into an unrelated immigration enforcement spending bill. During the tour, President Trump shrugged off the setback, showcasing architectural renderings and emphasizing that the structure features a specialized steel roof designed to serve as a military drone port to protect the broader Washington expanse.

Simultaneously, the administration is facing an intense political firestorm over a highly unorthodox settlement finalized by the Department of Justice. To resolve a federal civil lawsuit filed by the Trump family against the Internal Revenue Service over the unauthorized leak of their confidential tax records, the DOJ announced the creation of a 1.776 billion dollar "Anti-Weaponization Fund." Administered by a five-member appointed commission, the fund is designed to provide formal apologies and financial restitution to individuals who claim they were subjected to politically motivated investigations or "lawfare" by previous federal administrations.

The sweeping legal settlement has drawn sharp bipartisan concern. Under the terms of the agreement, the Trump family agreed to drop their claims against the IRS with prejudice and withdraw administrative claims regarding previous federal searches. In exchange, the settlement dictates that the federal government is forever barred and precluded from pursuing certain civil or criminal legal claims against the President and his immediate family, including any audits or prosecutions regarding past tax filings. Senate Majority Leader John Thune publicly broke ranks with the White House on the matter, explicitly stating he is "not a big fan" of the arrangement and warning that the administration faces a mountain of unanswered oversight questions from congressional regulators.

The compounding spending and legal controversies arrive on a critical day of testing for the administration's political clout, as voters head to the polls for highly competitive Republican midterm primary elections across the nation. The President has spent weeks aggressively intervening in these races, throwing his support behind close allies like Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton while actively working to unseat vocal intra-party critics such as Representative Thomas Massie in Kentucky.

The primary races are widely viewed as a crucial referendum on the administration's domestic message, particularly as voters grapple with a sharp surge in gasoline and consumer prices driven by the ongoing war with Iran. Pressed on whether the White House has struggled to uphold its core economic campaign promises, Vice President JD Vance acknowledged the localized financial strains but firmly defended the administration's record. Vance emphasized that historic tax cuts have already been delivered, characterizing the current Middle East-driven fuel hikes as a temporary market disruption that will restabilize once regional conflicts are resolved.

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By: NBC Palm Springs

May 19, 2026

White House ballroom constructionAntiWeaponization FundDonald Trump IRS settlementJohn Thune criticismJD Vance economic interviewmidterm primary election2026
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President Trump Defends One Billion Dollar Ballroom Plan as DOJ Unveils Contentious Anti-Weaponization Fund