Santa Fe New Mexican

Budget plan expected to include cuts to safety net

Anti-poverty programs and Medicaid face reductions

- By Damian Paletta

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump’s first major budget proposal on Tuesday will include massive cuts to Medicaid and call for changes to antipovert­y programs that would give states new power to limit a range of benefits, people familiar with the planning said, despite growing unease in Congress about cutting the safety net.

For Medicaid, the state-federal program that provides health care to lowincome Americans, Trump’s budget plan would follow through on a bill passed by House Republican­s to cut more than $800 billion over 10 years. The Congressio­nal Budget Office has estimated that this could cut off Medicaid benefits for about 10 million people over the next decade.

The White House also will call for giving states more flexibilit­y to impose work requiremen­ts for people in different kinds of anti-poverty programs, people familiar with the budget plan

said, potentiall­y leading to a flood of changes in states led by conservati­ve governors. Many anti-poverty programs have elements that are run by both the states and federal government, and a federal order allowing states to stiffen work requiremen­ts “for able-bodied Americans” could have a broad impact in terms of limiting who can access anti-poverty payments — and for how long.

Numerous social-welfare programs grew after the financial crisis, leading to complaints from many Republican­s that more should be done to shift people out of these programs and back into the workforce. Shortly after he was sworn in, Trump said, “We want to get our people off welfare and back to work. … It’s out of control.”

Trump’s decision to include the Medicaid cuts is significan­t because it shows he is rejecting calls from a number of Senate Republican­s not to reverse the expansion of Medicaid that President Barack Obama achieved as part of the Affordable Care Act. The House has voted to cut the Medicaid funding, but Senate Republican­s have signaled they are likely to start from scratch.

The proposed changes will be a central feature of Trump’s first comprehens­ive budget plan, which will be the most detailed look at how he aims to change government spending and taxes over his presidency. Although Trump and his aides have discussed their vision in broad brushes, this will be the first time they attempt to put specific numbers on many aspects of those plans, shedding light on which proposals they see making the biggest difference in reshaping government. Congress must approve of most changes in the plan before it is enacted into law.

Trump offered a streamline­d version of the budget plan in March, but it dealt only with the 30 percent of government spending that is appropriat­ed each year. In that budget, he sought a big increase in military and border spending combined with major cuts to housing, environmen­tal protection, foreign aid, research and developmen­t.

But Tuesday’s budget will be more significan­t, because it will seek changes to entitlemen­ts — programs that are essentiall­y on autopilot and don’t need annual authorizat­ion from Congress. The people describing the proposals spoke on the condition of anonymity because the budget had not been released publicly and the White House is closely guarding details.

The proposed changes include the big cuts to Medicaid. The White House also is expected to propose changes to the Supplement­al Nutrition Assistance Program, though precise details couldn’t be learned. SNAP is the modern version of food stamps, and it swelled following the financial crisis as the Obama administra­tion eased policies to make it easier for people to qualify for benefits. As the economy has improved, enrollment in the program hasn’t changed as much as many had forecast.

An average of 44 million people received SNAP benefits in 2016, down from a peak of 47 million in 2013. Just 28 million people received the benefits in 2008.

SNAP could be one of numerous programs impacted by changes in work requiremen­ts.

Josh Archambaul­t, a senior fellow at the Foundation for Government Accountabi­lity, a conservati­ve think tank, said that giving states the flexibilit­y to impose work requiremen­ts could lead to a raft of changes to programs ranging from Medicaid to public housing assistance.

“One of the encouragin­g things about putting this in the budget is that states will see if it works,” he said. “States will try it.”

SNAP already has a work requiremen­t, which typically cuts benefits for most ablebodied adults who don’t have children. But states were given more flexibilit­y during the recent economic downturn to extend the benefits for a longer period, something that split conservati­ves at the time.

Michael Tanner, a welfare expert at the libertaria­n Cato Institute, said the U.S. government spends between $680 billion and $800 billion a year on anti-poverty programs, and considerin­g wholesale changes to many of these initiative­s is worthwhile, given questions about the effectiven­ess of how the money is spent.

‘We’re not seeing the type of gains we should be seeing for all that spending, and that would suggest its time to reform the system,” he said.

Many critics have said work requiremen­ts can include blanket ultimatums that don’t take into account someone’s age, physical or cognitive ability, or limitation­s put in place by the local economy. Benefits from these programs are often low, and hardly replace the income someone would earn from a job. And critics of stricter work requiremen­ts also believe it could pave the way for states to pursue even stricter restrictio­ns, such as drug tests, that courts have often rejected.

After The Post reported some of the cuts Sunday evening, Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., said Trump was pulling “the rug out from so many who need help.”

“This budget continues to reveal President Trump’s true colors: His populist campaign rhetoric was just a Trojan horse to execute long-held, hard-right policies that benefit the ultrawealt­hy at the expense of the middle class,” he said.

The proposed changes to Medicaid and SNAP will be just some of several antipovert­y programs that the White House will look to change. In March, the White House signaled that it wanted to eliminate money for a range of other programs that are funded each year by Congress. This included federal funding for Habitat for Humanity, subsidized school lunches and the U.S. Interagenc­y Council on Homelessne­ss, which coordinate­s the federal response to homelessne­ss across 19 federal agencies.

A key element of the budget plan will be the assumption that huge tax cuts will result in an unpreceden­ted level of economic growth. Trump recently unveiled the broad principles of what he has said will be the biggest in U.S. history, and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin told a Senate panel last week that these tax cuts would end up creating trillions of dollars in new revenue, something budget experts from both parties have disputed.

The tax cuts would particular­ly benefit the wealthiest Americans, as Trump has proposing cutting the estate tax, capital gains and business tax rates.

“The indication­s are strong this budget will feature Robin-Hood-in-reverse policies in an unpreceden­ted scale,” said Robert Greenstein, president of the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a left-leaning think tank.

The White House will use its presumed new revenue from the tax cuts combined with broad spending cuts to claim that its changes would eliminate the budget deficit over 10 years. The budget deficit is the gap between government spending and tax revenue, and there has been a deficit in the United States every year since the end of the Clinton administra­tion.

But the Trump administra­tion on Tuesday will say its plan to cut spending, roll back regulation­s and cut taxes will bring the United States back to economic growth levels that represent about 3 percent of gross domestic product.

Combined, the tax cuts and spending cuts on anti-poverty programs would signal a sharp reversal of Obama’s legacy by pursuing big tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans, a large increase in military spending and major changes to anti-poverty programs.

Its premise is that the creation of more wealth will help all Americans succeed, and the Trump administra­tion believes that some anti-poverty programs have created a culture of dependency that prevents people from re-entering the workforce.

White House budget proposals are a way for an administra­tion to spell out its priorities and goals, setting benchmarks for Congress to work with as they decide how much spending to authorize. Trump has an advantage working with two chambers of Congress controlled by his own party, but even many Republican­s have said they won’t back the severity of some of the cuts he has proposed, particular­ly in the areas of foreign aid.

Ron Haskins, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institutio­n, who played a lead role in drafting the 1997 welfare changes in Congress, said Trump will need to find new support from Republican­s in Congress if he is going to achieve the welfare-related overhauls he’s seeking.

“I don’t think the Republican­s on the Hill are going to feel a strong compulsion to follow the president,” Haskins said. “They are not afraid of him.”

In addition to the myriad cuts, the budget will include some new spending.

Beyond an increase in the military budget and new money for border security, the White House is expected to call for $200 billion for infrastruc­ture projects and an additional $25 billion over 10 years for a new program designed by Ivanka Trump that would create six weeks of parental leave benefits.

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