Vancouver Sun

Winners, losers in $1.1-trillion showdown

- MATTHEW DALY

WASHINGTON • Retired miners, college students and Planned Parenthood are winners in the US$1.1 trillion spending bill unveiled on Monday. Losers are the wall along the U.S.-Mexico border, efforts to store nuclear waste at Nevada’s Yucca Mountain and President Donald Trump, who had many of his recommenda­tions rejected by Republican­s and Democrats.

The catch-all spending bill rebuffed cuts to popular programs targeted by Trump such as medical research, the Environmen­tal Protection Agency, foreign aid and infrastruc­ture grants.

Democrats played a strong hand in the budget talks since their votes are needed to pass the bill, even though Republican­s control both the White House and Congress. As a result, the measure doesn’t look much different than the deal that could have been struck on President Barack Obama’s watch last year.

A look at some winners and losers in the bill that funds the government through Sept. 30:

WINNERS

Military. The bill includes US$593 billion for the military, including US$15 billion of Trump’s US$30 billion emergency request from earlier this year. The Pentagon would receive a US$26 billion increase over last year, a 4 per cent increase. Military personnel would get a 2.1 per cent pay hike.

Planned Parenthood. The women’s health organizati­on will continue to receive federal funding despite repeated Republican efforts to deny the group money over its abortion services.

Retired miners. The deal includes US$1.3 billion to extend health insurance benefits for more than 22,000 retired mine workers and their widows.

College students. The bill restores eligibilit­y for yearround Pell Grants for college students.

LOSERS

Border wall. Trump has repeatedly said that Mexico would pay for the 3,200-km border wall. The administra­tion also sought US$1.4 billion in U.S. taxpayer dollars for the wall and related costs in the bill, but Trump later said the issue could wait. Trump, however, obtained US$1.5 billion for border security measures such as 5,000 additional detention beds, an upgrade in border infrastruc­ture and technologi­es such as surveillan­ce.

Yucca Mountain. The bill includes no money to revive the dormant Yucca Mountain nuclear waste repository in Nevada.

Trump. The president made concession­s on the border wall and the White House backed off on a threat to withhold payments that help lower-income Americans pay their medical bills.

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