Orlando Sentinel

White House tells Cabinet to be mum on its budget

- By Andrew Taylor

WASHINGTON — The White House is instructin­g Cabinet heads and agency officials not to elaborate on President Donald Trump’s proposed budget cuts beyond what was in a relatively brief submission, a move Democrats decried as a gag order.

Budget director Mick Mulvaney wrote in a recent memo that until the full budget release in May, “all public comments of any sort should be limited to the informatio­n contained in the Budget Blueprint chapter for your agency,” referring to the 53-page document released Thursday.

The budget traded a $54 billion boost for the military for crushing cuts to domestic programs like medical research, community developmen­t, foreign aid and a slew of other services. Typically, Cabinet heads and agency officials testify before the respective congressio­nal committees on the budget after its release.

Mulvaney said department and agency heads should not make “commitment­s about specific programs” or provide further detail about cuts to programs that went unmentione­d in last week’s summary budget, which glossed over many of the most politicall­y difficult details.

“It is critically important that you not make commitment­s about specific programs if they are not expressly mentioned in the budget,” Mulvaney wrote in the memo late last week. “Similarly, you should not address account-level details. Comments of such specifics need to wait until the release of the full budget.”

Mulvaney’s memo is similar to edicts issued by previous administra­tions, both Democratic and

“Was it a gag order in 2009 when President Obama’s OMB issued a similar memo?” said Mulvaney spokesman John Czwartacki.

But the current order is stricter since Trump’s initial budget submission is far lighter on details than the interim budget submitted by President Barack Obama in 2009, for instance. Mulvaney also said that only Cabinet or agency heads should testify before Congress, which is problemati­c since relatively few sub-Cabinet officials have been nominated, much less confirmed.

In addition, House hearings featuring Education Secretary Betsy DeVos and top National Institutes of Health officials have been postponed, leading Democrats to charge that the White House has issued a gag order to avoid negative publicity about the budget.

“I can understand why no one from the administra­tion would want to come up to the Hill — or is allowed to come up to the Hill — to defend the budget,” said top House Appropriat­ions Committee Democrat Nita Lowey of New York. “DeVos doesn’t want to come up here to defend the cuts to afterschoo­l Republican. programs.”

Trump’s budget landed with a thud on Capitol Hill, with even the administra­tion’s staunchest allies lining up against cuts to programs like foreign aid, after-school programs, and agricultur­e and education.

“America being a force is a lot more than building up the Defense Department. Diplomacy is important, extremely important, and I don’t think these reductions at the State Department are appropriat­e,” said Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., on Tuesday.

“There are things on the domestic side that are extremely important,” McConnell added, saying he’ll defend the NIH and stave off a plan to eliminate funding for the Appalachia­n Regional Commission, which funds economic developmen­t projects in his state.

The administra­tion’s complete budget request is slated for release in midMay, far later than is typical even in a presidenti­al transition year.

Defense Secretary James Mattis is testifying Wednesday before the Senate Appropriat­ions Committee in a defense panel hearing focusing on “the budget and readiness of the Department of Defense.”

 ?? ANDREW HARNIK/AP ?? Budget director Mick Mulvaney has instructed executive branch officials not to elaborate on proposed cuts.
ANDREW HARNIK/AP Budget director Mick Mulvaney has instructed executive branch officials not to elaborate on proposed cuts.

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