Trump proposes US$163 billion cut to federal budget
The so-called skinny budget is an outline of administration priorities
[WASHINGTON] US President Donald Trump’s administration on Friday (May 2) proposed a US$163 billion cut to federal spending next year, which would eliminate more than a fifth of the non-military spending excluding mandatory benefit programmes.
The proposed budget would raise defence spending by 13 per cent and homeland security spending by nearly 65 per cent from 2025 enacted levels. Non-defence discretionary spending would be cut by 23 per cent to the lowest level since 2017, the White House Office of Management and Budget said in a statement.
The so-called skinny budget is an outline of administration priorities that will give Republican appropriators in Congress a blueprint to begin crafting spending bills.
As Trump’s first budget since reclaiming office, it sets out to make good on his promises to boost spending on the armed forces and border security, while slashing the federal bureaucracy.
“At this critical moment, we need a historic budget-one that ends the funding of our decline, puts Americans first, and delivers unprecedented support to our military and homeland security,” OMB Director Russ Vought said in the statement.
The federal government currently has a growing US$36 trillion debt pile, and some fiscal conservatives and budget experts worry Trump’s tax-cut bill will add to it without sufficient spending cuts.
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Trump is pushing the Republican-controlled Congress to extend the 2017 tax cuts that were his major legislative achievement in his first term, which nonpartisan forecasters say could add US$5 trillion to the nation’s debt.
The annual White House budget request includes economic forecasts as well as detailed proposals about how much money should be spent by every government agency for the fiscal year that starts on Oct 1. Outlays in fiscal 2024 amounted to US$6.8 trillion, according to the Congressional Budget Office.
Lawmakers often make substantial changes in the White House’s budget request. But Trump commands unusual sway over this Republican-controlled Congress and may get much of what he seeks.
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Republicans in Congress hope to enact the tax cut bill by Jul 4 and are working to bridge internal divisions over proposed cuts in federal spending to pay for it. They may have to factor in growing stress in the US economy from Trump’s tariff hikes that are upending global trade.
The budget proposal furthers Trump’s promise to shutter or greatly diminish the US Department of Education, OMB said, while preserving funding for children from low-income families.
“Donald Trump’s days of pretending to be a populist are over,” said US Senator Chuck Schumer, the Senate’s top Democrat, in a statement. “His policies are nothing short of an all-out assault on hardworking Americans. As he guts healthcare, slashes education, and hollows out programmes families rely on- he’s bankrolling tax breaks for billionaires and big corporations.”
The White House budget calls for an additional US$500 million in discretionary spending to bolster border security and aid Trump’s push for mass deportations, as well as US$766 million to procure border security technology funding, and funding to maintain 22,000 Border Patrol Agents and hire additional Customs and Border Patrol officers. REUTERS
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