- Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche issued a statement that effectively ends all pending IRS audits of President Trump, his family, and related businesses — including audits not yet started on recently filed returns.
- The move was part of a settlement in which Trump withdrew a $10 billion lawsuit against the IRS over the illegal leak of his tax returns, and the government created a $1.8 billion “Anti-Weaponization Fund.”
- Former IRS commissioners from both parties said they were unaware of any precedent for a president receiving a blanket no-audit guarantee from an administration he controls.
- Legal scholars say it is unclear who would have standing to challenge the agreement in court — and that Congress would need two-thirds majorities to override a presidential veto to undo it legislatively.
What Happened?
Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche published a one-page statement Tuesday that ends all pending IRS audits of Donald Trump, his family members, and affiliated businesses — and appears to prohibit future audits on tax returns already filed. The move came as part of a settlement: Trump withdrew a $10 billion lawsuit he had filed against the IRS over the illegal leak of his tax returns by contractor Charles Littlejohn, now in federal prison. In return, the government created a $1.8 billion “Anti-Weaponization Fund” and issued the audit immunity statement. The IRS had been auditing Trump for tax years 2015 through 2019, with a potential liability of more than $100 million reportedly still outstanding.
Why It Matters?
This is without precedent in American history. A sitting president has used his control over the executive branch — including the Justice Department and the IRS — to immunize himself from tax enforcement that applies to every other American citizen. The structural problem is plain: Trump is on both sides of the arrangement, simultaneously the plaintiff, the head of the government’s legal team, and the beneficiary of a settlement his own appointees negotiated and signed. Former IRS commissioners appointed by presidents of both parties say nothing like this has ever occurred. The law that bars executive interference in audits does contain an attorney general exception — but that exception was never contemplated for a case where the president is the taxpayer in question.
What’s Next?
Legal standing is the key obstacle to any court challenge: because Trump withdrew his lawsuit, that case is closed, and it is unclear who can claim specific harm from the immunity grant. Congressional Democrats on the Ways and Means and Judiciary committees have sent letters demanding answers, but Republican majorities make legislative reversal effectively impossible without a veto-proof supermajority. A future administration’s IRS could theoretically audit returns filed after this week — the immunity covers pending and currently foreseeable matters, not future filings. Whether courts would enforce or void the Blanche statement if a future IRS tried to act remains entirely untested.
Source: The Wall Street Journal













