The Freeman

Cabinet members head to Capitol Hill to defend Trump budget

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WASHINGTON — Top officials in President Donald Trump's Cabinet are heading to Capitol Hill to defend his plans to cut domestic programs and parry Democratic criticism of his tax proposals.

Budget Director Mick Mulvaney appears Wednesday before the House Budget panel while Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin will testify at the tax-writing House Ways and Means Committee. The budget contains virtually no further detail on taxes beyond the cuts the administra­tion proposed in a one-page outline last month.

Trump on Tuesday released a 10-year budget plan containing jarring, politicall­y unrealisti­c cuts to the social safety net and a broad swath of domestic programs.

The plan, Trump's first as president, combines $4.1 trillion for the upcoming 2018 fiscal year with a promise to bring the budget back into balance in 10 years, relying on aggressive spending cuts, a surge in economic growth — and a $2 trillion-plus accounting gimmick.

Trump's budget is simply a proposal. There's little appetite among Capitol Hill Republican­s for a genuine effort to balance the budget; GOP lawmakers this year are instead pressing to rewrite the tax code and forge a spending deal with Democrats that would permit higher military spending.

Trump's budget holds true to his campaign pledge to leave Medicare and Social Security pension benefits alone and contains spending increases for the military and veterans, but it treats most of the rest of the government as fair game. It foresees an overhaul of the tax code, which analysts say could direct most of its benefits to upper-income earners.

Trump won support from GOP leaders.

"Here's what I'm happy about. We finally have a president who's willing to actually even balance the budget," said House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis. "At least we now have common objectives. Grow the economy, balance the budget."

Many rank-and-file Republican­s recoiled from the cuts, however, which would squeeze foreign aid and domestic programs funded annually by Congress by about 10 percent next year and $1.4 trillion over the coming decade.

Mulvaney, a former tea party congressma­n, is the driving force behind the Trump budget plan, winning the president's approval for big cuts to benefit programs whose budgets are essentiall­y on autopilot.

Food stamp cuts would drive millions from the program, while a wave of Medicaid cuts — on top of more than $800 billion in the House-passed health care bill — could deny nursing home care to millions of elderly poor people. It would also force some people on Social Security's disability program back into the workforce.

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