Attorney General Pam Bondi is now tasked with probing allegations that online platforms facilitate illegal, untraceable donations. Trump’s directive leans on a previous report from House Republicans that claimed the platform lacks adequate fraud safeguards. Democratic leadership immediately dismissed the move as a transparent political maneuver, noting the absence of concrete evidence of wrongdoing.
Rep. Jamie Raskin, the ranking Democrat on the House Judiciary Committee, characterized the order as an attempt to distract from the president's own legal vulnerabilities. Raskin and other party officials framed the investigation as an act of intimidation designed to cripple the opposition's campaign infrastructure. Since its 2004 launch, ActBlue has processed nearly $17 billion in contributions for progressive groups and candidates.
ActBlue officials labeled the White House escalation as blatantly unlawful, vowing to pursue all available legal avenues to defend their operations. Democratic National Committee chair Ken Martin condemned the directive as authoritarian, arguing that the administration is attempting to throttle grassroots participation while shielding its own financial dealings from oversight.

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