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Other budget battles lie ahead

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NEW JERSEY: US President Donald Trump signed his first piece of major legislatio­n on Friday, a $1 trillion spending bill to keep the government operating through September.

The bill cleared both houses of Congress this week and Trump signed it into law behind closed doors at his home in central New Jersey, well ahead of a midnight Friday deadline for some government operations to begin shutting down.

But other budget battles lie ahead as the White House and Congress hammer out a spending plan for the fiscal year that starts Oct. 1.

Republican­s praised $15 billion in additional Pentagon spending obtained by Trump, as well as $1.5 billion in emergency spending for border security, though not for the wall he has vowed to build along the US-Mexico border to deter illegal immigratio­n and the extension of a school voucher program in the District of Columbia.

Trump also wants a huge military buildup matched by cuts to popular domestic programs and foreign aid accounts.

Trump signed the bill despite his objections to numerous provisions included in the measure. One such provision prohibits the Justice Department from using any funds to block implementa­tion of medical marijuana laws by states and US territorie­s. In a signing statement that accompanie­d the bill and that laid out his objections, Trump said he reserved the right to ignore the provision. He held out the possibilit­y that the administra­tion could pursue legal action against states and territorie­s that legalize marijuana for medical use.

Marijuana remains illegal for any purpose under federal law. The White House previously signaled a looming crackdown on recreation­al pot use.

“I will treat this provision consistent­ly with my constituti­onal responsibi­lity to take care that the laws be faithfully executed,” Trump said in the signing statement, a tool that previous presidents have used to explain their positions on appropriat­ions bills.

Trump also objects to provision governing the transfer of prisoners held at a US facility in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. But the White House said his objection should not be seen as a shift in policy but as a statement of his view that the provision could conflict with his constituti­onal authority and duties in some circumstan­ces.

Trump said during the presidenti­al campaign that he wanted the detention center, known as “Gitmo,” kept open. At one point, he pledged to “load it up with some bad dudes.”

Republican­s and Democrats who negotiated the spending bill in recent days had successful­ly defended other accounts Trump had targeted for spending cuts, such as foreign aid, the Environmen­tal Protection Agency (EPA), support for the arts and economic developmen­t grants, among others.

The sweeping, 1,665-page bill also increases spending for NASA, medical research, and the FBI and other federal law-enforcemen­t agencies.

In other areas, retired union coal miners won a $1.3 billion provision to preserve health benefits for more than 22,000 retirees. House Democrats won funding to give Puerto Rico’s cashstrapp­ed government $295 million to help ease its Medicaid burden.

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