Porterville Recorder

Trump’s budget balloons deficits, cuts social safety net

- By ANDREW TAYLOR and MARTIN CRUTSINGER

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump unveiled a $4.4 trillion budget plan Monday that envisions steep cuts to America's social safety net but mounting spending on the military, formally retreating from last year's promises to balance the federal budget.

The president's spending outline for the first time acknowledg­es that the Republican tax overhaul passed last year would add billions to the deficit and not “pay for itself” as Trump and his Republican allies asserted. If enacted as proposed, though no presidenti­al budget ever is, the plan would establish an era of $1 trillion-plus yearly deficits.

The open embrace of red ink is a remarkable public reversal for Trump and his party, which spent years objecting to President Barack Obama's increased spending during the depths of the Great Recession. Rhetoric aside, however, Trump's pattern is in line with past Republican presidents who have overseen spikes in deficits as they simultaneo­usly increased military spending and cut taxes.

“We're going to have the strongest military we've ever had, by far,” Trump said in an Oval Office appearance Monday. “In this budget we took care of the military like it's never been taken care of before.”

Trump's budget revived his calls for big cuts to domestic programs that benefit the poor and middle class, such as food stamps, housing subsidies and student loans. Retirement benefits would remain mostly untouched by Trump's plan, as he has pledged, though Medicare providers would absorb about $500 billion in cuts — a nearly 6 percent reduction. Some beneficiar­ies in Social Security's disability program would have to re-enter the workforce under proposed changes to eligibilit­y rules.

While all presidents' budgets are essentiall­y dead on arrival — Congress writes and enacts its own spending legislatio­n — Trump's plan was dead before it landed. It came just three days after the president signed a bipartisan agreement that set broad parameters for spending over the next two years. That deal, which includes large increases for domestic programs, rendered Monday's Trump plan for 10-year, $1.7 trillion cuts to domestic agencies such as the department­s of Health and Human Services, Agricultur­e and Housing and Urban Developmen­t even more unrealisti­c.

The White House used Monday's event to promote its long-awaited plan to increase funding for infrastruc­ture. The plan would put up $200 billion in federal money over the next 10 years in hopes of leveraging a total of $1.5 trillion in infrastruc­ture spending, relying on state and local government­s and the private sector to contribute the bulk of the funding.

But after his aides talked up that plan over the weekend, Trump suggested that his infrastruc­ture proposal wasn't a big deal for him.

“If for any reason, they don't want to support to it, hey, that's going to be up to them,” he said of the Republican-controlled Congress. “What was very important to me was the military; what was very important to me was the tax cuts.”

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