The Day

White House calls for domestic cuts to finance border wall

- By ANDREW TAYLOR

Washington — President Donald Trump is proposing immediate budget cuts of $18 billion from programs like medical research, infrastruc­ture and community grants so U.S. taxpayers, not Mexico, can cover the down payment on the border wall.

The White House documents were submitted to Congress amid negotiatio­ns over a catchall spending bill that would avert a partial government shutdown at the end of next month. The package would wrap up $1.1 trillion in unfinished spending bills and address the Trump administra­tion’s request for an immediate $30 billion in additional Pentagon spending.

The latest Trump proposal, disclosed Tuesday, would eliminate $1.2 billion in National Institutes of Health research grants, a favorite of both parties. The community developmen­t block grant program, also popular, would be halved, amounting to a cut of $1.5 billion, and Trump would strip $500 million from a popular grant program for transporta­tion projects.

Like Trump’s 2018 proposed budget, which was panned by both Democrats and Republican­s earlier this month, the proposals have little chance of being enacted.

But they could create bad political optics for the struggling Trump White House, since the administra­tion asked earlier for $3 billion to pay for the Trump’s controvers­ial U.S.-Mexico border wall and other immigratio­n enforcemen­t plans. During the campaign, Trump repeatedly promised Mexico would pay for the wall, a claim the country has disputed.

“The administra­tion is asking the American taxpayer to cover the cost of a wall — unneeded, ineffectiv­e, absurdly expensive — that Mexico was supposed to pay for, and he is cutting programs vital to the middle class to get that done,” said Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y. “Build the wall or repair or build a bridge or tunnel or road in your community? What’s the choice?”

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