Chicago Sun-Times

Trump budget to increase defense, slash agencies

Outline keeps campaign promises; Dems decry ‘ meat ax’

- Donovan Slack @ donovansla­ck

President Trump has WASHINGTON signed off on top- line numbers in a budget outline that seeks to make good on his campaign promises by increasing military spending by 10% and offsetting the cost with deep cuts to other agencies across the federal government.

“This budget will be a public safety and national security budget, very much based on those two with plenty of other things but very strong,” Trump said Monday. “And it will include a historic increase in defense spending to rebuild the depleted military of the United States of America at a time we most need it.”

He said he will lay out more detail Tuesday during a prime- time address to a joint session of Congress.

“This defense spending increase will be offset and paid for by finding greater savings and efficienci­es across the federal government,” Trump said. “We’re going to do more with less.”

The WhiteHouse said the budget outline includes a $ 54 billion increase in defense spending and an equivalent cut in non- defense, discretion­ary spending. That would mean the current discretion­ary budget of $ 1.064 trillion would remain unchanged.

As part of the proposed cuts, which would affect nearly every agency, the administra­tion will seek to cut foreign aid, something the president referenced Monday morning during a meeting with governors at the White House. Trump said the budget “puts America first by keeping tax dollars in America.”

It also includes investment­s in law enforcemen­t and the Department of Veterans Affairs.

“We can do so much more with the money we spend,” Trump said. “With $ 20 trillion in debt, can you imagine that, the government must learn to tighten its belt, something families all across the country have had to learn to do, unfortunat­ely.”

The White House sent the approved top- line numbers Monday to individual agencies, which will be tasked with filling in the details of where cuts and increases would be made before the White House finalizes the proposal and sends it to Congress in the coming weeks. Congress would be responsibl­e for debating and passing spending bills, on which Trump would have the final sign- off.

Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer, D- N. Y, wasn’t waiting to hear more details. He said Monday that Trump’s proposed cuts— roughly 10% of non- defense, discretion­ary spending — would take “a meat ax to programs that benefit the middle class.”

“A cut this steep almost certainly means cuts to agencies that protect consumers fromWall Street excess and protect clean air and water,” Schumer said in a statementM­onday.

“This budget proposal is a reflection of exactly who this president is and what today’s Republican Party believes in: helping the wealthy and special interests while putting further burdens on the middle class and those struggling to get there.”

Mick Mulvaney, director of the White House Office of Management and Budget, said the budget outline numbers do not take into account revenue projection­s from promised tax cuts or added spending on infrastruc­ture. Nor does it rely on any financial impact from a repealand- replace of the Affordable Care Act. He said those items would be included in a “full- blown” budget proposal that would be submitted to Congress in May.

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