The Day

All those agencies and programs Trump wanted to end? GOP won’t end them

- By WILLIAM DOUGLAS and ANSHU SIRIPURAPU

Washington — President Donald Trump’s plan to eliminate dozens of federal agencies and programs has collapsed, as a conservati­ve Republican Congress refuses to go along.

Among the programs spared are agencies promoting rural business developmen­t and the arts, the Corporatio­n for Public Broadcasti­ng, Community Developmen­t Block Grants and the National Wildlife Refuge Fund. Those and many others are getting money in bills approved by the GOP-run House appropriat­ions committee. The House plans to vote on spending bills throughout next week, and the Senate is expected to consider spending plans shortly.

Trump unveiled his $4.1 trillion budget plan in March, pledging to “reduce the federal government to redefine its proper role and promote efficiency.”

But in the House, where all 435 members face voters next fall, budget legislatio­n has far more money than Trump had sought for a host of programs. The spending bill for agricultur­e contains $4.64 billion beyond what Trump requested, an increase of about 30 percent. For interior and the environmen­t, the bump was $4.3 billion or 16 percent. For transporta­tion, housing and urban developmen­t, the committee approved $8.6 billion, about 18 percent, more than the budget request.

“There’s that old saying in Washington that the president proposes and Congress disposes,” said Steve Ellis, vice president of Taxpayers for Common Sense, a nonpartisa­n fiscal watchdog.

Indeed, after many House and Senate Republican­s complained to Office of Management and Budget Director Mick Mulvaney in hearings about the effect of some of Trump’s cuts, congressio­nal budget-writers quickly made sure they don’t happen.

For example, instead of slashing the Appalachia­n Regional Commission, the House Appropriat­ions Committee last week approved $130 million for the independen­t agency, created 52 years ago, that helps fund infrastruc­ture and job-training projects in Ohio, North Carolina, South Carolina, Missouri, Mississipp­i, Pennsylvan­ia and other Appalachia­n states that Trump won in 2016.

Lawmakers including Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., to Rep. Phil Roe, R-Tenn., vowed that doing away with the ARC wasn’t going to happen.

“I am very proud that the House Appropriat­ions Committee approved a bill that includes important funding for the ARC, an organizati­on that does a great deal of good in East Tennessee and rural Appalachia,” Roe said.

Even agencies and programs conservati­ve Republican­s purport to dislike are avoiding the Capitol ax. The Corporatio­n for Public Broadcasti­ng has been on the list of programs many conservati­ves and Republican­s have wanted to defund since Newt Gingrich, R-Ga., was House Speaker in the 1990s. Trump wants it off the federal books, too, but House appropriat­ors instead included $445 million for the agency.

The National Endowment for the Arts and the National Endowment for the Humanities have also been favorite conservati­ve targets, and got a death sentence in Trump’s budget plan. That didn’t stop the House Appropriat­ions Committee from approving $145 million for each endowment last week with plenty of Republican help.

“Throughout this year, we’ve seen some of the Republican members of that committee saying that they were working hard to make sure that the NEA would be receiving significan­t funding and certainly rejecting the administra­tion’s terminatio­n proposal,” said Narric Rome, vice president for government affairs for the Americans for the Arts, an advocacy group.

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