SIGNAL GRIDv0.1

Trump says he’s not sure if ‘anti-weaponization’ fund is really dead: ‘I’d have to ask the lawyers’

1 sources2 storiesFirst seen 6/4/2026Score45Mixed Progress
Single SourceContradictory Claims
CoverageRecencyEngagementVelocityBignessConfidenceClipability
Bigness
45
Coverage
13
Recency
86
Engagement
20
Velocity
100
Confidence
49
Clipability
52
Polarization
0
Claims
5
Contradictions
1
Breakthrough
50

Sentiment Mix

Positive0%
Neutral100%
Negative0%

Geography

North America

Expert Signals

Politics - NBC News

source2 mentions

AI-Generated Claims

Generated from linked receipts; click sources for full context.

Trump adds uncertainty to the status of $1.8 billion 'anti-weaponization' fund.

Supported by 1 story

When asked by a reporter, President Trump did not clarify the future of the $1.8 billion anti-weaponization fund, saying he would "have to ask the lawyers.

Supported by 1 story

I don't know." Trump's comments follow acting Attorney General Todd Blanche's statement that the Justice Department is "not moving forward" with the fund.

Supported by 1 story

Trump says he's not sure if ‘anti-weaponization' fund is really dead: ‘I'd have to ask the lawyers'.

Supported by 1 story

Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche said Tuesday the Justice Department was "not moving forward" with the $1.8 billion fund.

Supported by 1 story

Claim Contradictions

negation mismatch

A: Trump adds uncertainty to the status of $1.8 billion 'anti-weaponization' fund.

B: Trump says he's not sure if ‘anti-weaponization' fund is really dead: ‘I'd have to ask the lawyers'.

Related Events

Timeline (2 stories)

Receipts (2)

Bias Snapshot

Center
Left 0%Center 100%Right 0%
Blognbcnews.com6/4/2026
Blognbcnews.com6/4/2026