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By Mike Allen · Oct 21, 2025

Good Tuesday afternoon. Today's newsletter, edited by Sam Baker, is 885 words, a 3.5-min. read. Thanks to Sheryl Miller for copy editing.

 
 
1 big thing: Trump sought $230M from Justice Dept.
 
President Trump during lunch with Republican senators in the Rose Garden today. Photo: Allison Robbert/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Before his reelection, Donald Trump wanted the Justice Department to pay him as much as $230 million in damages for past investigations — a demand that was going nowhere until Trump blurted out a vague reference to it last week, top officials tell Axios' Marc Caputo.

  • Now its fate is uncertain.

Why it matters: The New York Times, which first reported Trump's demand, pointed out that "any settlement might ultimately be approved by senior department officials who defended him or those in his orbit."

Now, of course, the Justice Department is stacked top to bottom with Trump loyalists. But there'd been no internal conversation about the matter since the inauguration, until Trump himself reopened it while talking to the press in the Oval Office last week, a senior administration official told us.

  • Trump said, without explanation, that he'd brought "a great lawsuit" based on past investigations of him, but added that it now "sort of looks bad — I'm suing myself, right?"

The senior administration official told us there had been "no conversation about this at any level since Inauguration Day. It's like it didn't even exist."

  • "But then the president said what he said, and here we are," the official added. "Beyond that, there has been no communication or movement on this whatsoever. It's not a thing. At least, it's not a thing right now."

Behind the scenes: The officials told Axios that the claims, filed when Trump was out of office, came up internally during the transition, but haven't been pursued since the election. The officials didn't confirm the total amount.

  • A source from the transition, between Trump's reelection and inauguration, said: "This came up during the transition and at first we thought: 'Oh, no. He's going to sue himself?' Then when we realized it was filed against the Biden Justice Department, the word was that it was just dropped."

The Times says that when Trump was out of office, he submitted complaints through an administrative claim process that's often the precursor to lawsuits:

  1. The first claim, in late 2023, seeks damages for the FBI and special counsel investigation into Russian election tampering and possible connections to his 2016 campaign.
  2. The second claim, in summer 2024, accuses the FBI of violating Trump's privacy by searching Mar-a-Lago for classified documents in 2022. That complaint also accuses the Justice Department of malicious prosecution in charging him with mishandling sensitive records.

Trump himself reopened the issue during an appearance in the Oval Office last week with Attorney General Pam Bondi and FBI Director Kash Patel, while he was discussing the FBI's 2022 raid on Mar-a-Lago.

  • "I have a lawsuit that was doing very well. And when I became president, I said: I'm sort of suing myself," he said.
  • "How do you settle the lawsuit? I'll say: 'Give me X dollars,' right? And I don't know what to do with the lawsuit — it's a great lawsuit. And now I won. It sort of looks bad — I'm suing myself, right? So, I don't know. But that was a lawsuit that was very strong, very powerful."
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