Bar President From Suing Federal Government

Full Title:
No Presidential Self-Serving Lawsuits Act of 2026

Summary#

This bill would bar the President from filing any civil lawsuit against the United States. It also declares void a specific settlement called Trump v. Internal Revenue Service, No. 1:26-cv-20609 (S.D. Fla.), and stops Federal money from being used to create a compensation fund or to pay that settlement. The Treasury Secretary would be able to try to recover any Federal funds that were used in violation of the bill.

  • Main change: a President may not file a civil action against the United States.
  • Specific voiding: it voids the named settlement in Trump v. IRS.
  • Money rules: no Federal funds may be used for a compensation fund to resolve suits brought by a President or former President, and no Federal funds may be used with respect to the named settlement.
  • Enforcement step: the Treasury Secretary may recover Federal funds used in violation of the money rules.

What it means for you#

  • President (current): The bill says a President may not file a civil lawsuit against the United States. This would stop a sitting President from bringing such cases in court.
  • Former Presidents: The bill bars Federal funds for compensation funds tied to suits by a former President, but it does not explicitly say a former President may not file a lawsuit. This point is unclear.
  • People involved in Trump v. IRS: The settlement named in the bill would be void. The bill does not say what court procedures follow or whether the case restarts.
  • Federal agencies and Treasury: Agencies could not use Federal money to set up a compensation fund to settle a civil action brought by a President or former President. The Treasury Secretary may act to recover money used in breach of that rule.
  • Taxpayers: The bill aims to prevent use of Federal funds for certain settlements. Practical effects on taxpayers depend on whether funds were or would be used and on any recovery actions by Treasury.

Expenses#

No publicly available information.

  • The bill text does not include a fiscal note or cost estimate.
  • Possible costs not detailed include administrative costs to recover funds, litigation costs if the voided settlement leads to more court work, or costs to federal agencies from changing legal handling of such cases. These are not quantified in the bill text.

Proponents' View#

  • The bill appears intended to stop a sitting President from suing the United States for personal benefit.
  • It appears designed to block use of Federal money to resolve such suits, including a specific recent settlement.
  • Supporters may argue this prevents a President from using the courts to obtain funds or benefits paid by the federal government.

Opponents' View#

  • One concern is that the bill does not clearly say whether former Presidents may file civil suits; the language bans only a sitting President from filing.
  • The bill voids a specific named settlement but does not explain what happens next in the court case. It is unclear whether litigation would resume or how courts should proceed.
  • The bill does not explain how “civil action against the United States” is defined. It is unclear whether routine lawsuits (for example, suits challenging government action) are included.
  • There may be legal questions about limiting access to courts or about retroactively voiding a settlement, but the bill does not address constitutional or procedural issues.
  • The bill gives the Treasury Secretary power to recover funds but does not set procedures, time limits, or costs for recovery.