Donald Trump’s White House released
a budget proposal
on Friday that pairs an unprecedented, debt-exploding $1.5 trillion in military spending with
tens of billions of dollars in cuts to domestic agencies and education, healthcare,
climate, and housing programs.
Trump’s budget request for fiscal year 2027, which must be
approved by Congress, includes $73 billion in total cuts to nondefense spending
while boosting military outlays by 42%—or nearly $500 billion—compared to
current levels.
Programs cut or eliminated in the proposed budget—under
the guise of slashing “woke programs” and “ending the Green New Scam”—include the Environmental
Protection Agency’s Environmental
Justice program, Community Services Block Grants, electric vehicle
charging subsidies, renewable energy initiatives
at the Interior Department, the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, and
Pathways to Removing Obstacles to Housing.
The budget proposal also calls for cuts to the already-depleted Internal
Revenue Service, without offering specific figures. One budget expert noted that,
if enacted, the White House’s requested cuts would bring nondefense
discretionary spending to “its lowest level in the modern era.” Rep. Greg Casar (D-Texas),
chairman of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, wrote in
response to Trump’s request that “to pay for his endless wars, he wants the
biggest increase to military spending in 70 years.” “How does he pay for it?
Cuts to ‘education, health, housing, and more,’” Casar added. “Hell no.”
Robert Weissman, co-president of Public Citizen, said
in a statement that “the Trump-Vought budget proposal is a moral obscenity,”
referring to Russell Vought, director of the White House Office of Management
and Budget.
“The $500 billion annual increase in proposed Pentagon spending—if
it were instead deployed humanely—would be enough to solve or meaningfully
address the nation’s great problems, from healthcare to daycare, from the climate crisis to affordable housing,
from improving schools to making college education affordable,” said Weissman.
“Instead, Trump and Vought propose to spend an unfathomable amount on a
Pentagon that can’t even pass an audit to further empower an out-of-control and
incompetent leader in Pete Hegseth.”
“As usual, the priorities of the people are simply
unimportant to this administration as they think about spending our taxpayer
dollars,” Weissman continued. “Republicans and
Democrats in Congress should treat this proposal with all the care it deserves
and immediately hit delete.”
“Trump said that our country cannot afford to help
families with childcare or healthcare—but his own budget proves what a
ridiculous farce that is.”
The White House unveiled its budget request days after
Trump said it is “not possible” for the federal government “to take care of
daycare, Medicaid, Medicare, all these
individual things” because “we’re fighting wars,” comments that observers viewed as
a stark summary of the administration’s priorities.
“Trump is telling the American people our country somehow
can’t afford childcare, Medicaid, and Medicare, but is never too stretched to
fund wars of choice,” Rep. Brendan Boyle (D-Pa.), the top Democrat on the House
Budget Committee, said in a statement Friday. “He is wrong. We are the
wealthiest country in the world and can absolutely afford to both defend and
invest in the American people.”
“The president is now demanding a massive increase in
defense spending, including a $350 billion slush fund for his reckless war with
Iran, while cutting billions from healthcare, education, housing, and more.
This budget represents ‘America Last,’” said Boyle. “I will be demanding
answers from White House OMB Director Russell Vought when he testifies at the
House Budget Committee on April 15.”
The Trump White House is calling on Congress to approve a
significant chunk—roughly $350 billion—of its proposed military budget increase
via the filibuster-proof reconciliation process, which would allow Republicans
to push the funding through without any Democratic support. The new budget
request also calls for a “historic investment” in the Department of Homeland
Security, which has been partially shut down for more than a month as Democrats
push for reforms to Immigration and
Customs Enforcement (ICE).
“This funding would come in addition to the $170 billion
passed just last year that has enabled the deaths of migrants in
detention centers, the detention of children, and the
deaths of US citizens at the hands of mass deportation agents,” Lindsay
Koshgarian, program director of the National Priorities Project, said in response to the budget request.
“The president looked at the country, with our rising gas
prices and nearly half of us struggling to afford basic necessities and decided what we really need is a bigger war budget,” said Koshgarian. “Not
healthcare or childcare or relief from high prices or expensive housing, but a
nearly bottomless budget for whatever wars his cronies and the contractors
dream up next.”
-Jake Johnson, Common Dreams

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