The Palm Beach Post

Advocates for minorities pan budget

Critics decry the priorities in Trump’s budget.

- By Jesse J. Holland Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Advocates for minority communitie­s say President Donald Trump’s proposed budget answers the question he famously posed to black Americans during his campaign: “What the hell do you have to lose?”

His $4.1 trillion spending plan for the budget year beginning Oct. 1 generally makes deep cuts in safety net pro grams, including Medicaid, the Children’s Health Insurance Program and Social Securit y’s disability program.

“Here is the reality: Many poor b l a c k f a mil i e s a nd brown families and Asian families and indigenous families will be devastated by this budget,” said Bishop Dwayne Royster, founder of Philadelph­ia’s Living Water United Church of Christ.

The White House said its budget would put the country back on track for a healthy economy.

“We’re not going to meas ure c ompassion by t he amount of money that we spend, but by the number of people that we help,” White House budget director Mick Mulvaney said this past week.

Critics decry the priori t i es in Trump’s budget , which Congress is unlikely to pass as submitted. Still, it will serve as a guidepost for what the White House wants lawmakers to deliver to the president.

“It is an attack of unimaginab­le cruelty on the most vulnerable among us, the youngest, the oldest, the poorest, and hardworkin­g people who need a little help to gain or hang on to a decent middle-class life,” Hillary Clinton said Friday.

Trump’s budget would slash Medicaid and the Children’s Health Insurance Program, which provide health insurance for millions of poor families, by $616 billion over the next decade. It would cut the food stamp program by $191 billion over the next dec ade and the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families program by $22 billion.

“Great nations are known by how they care for the old and the vulnerable, not by how much they can take away f ro m t hem t o g ive to their wealthy friends,” NAACP Chairman Leon W. Russell said.

Several people pointed to the targeting of the Education Department for a 13 percent cut as particular­ly troubling.

That “will undoubtedl­y hurt our most vulnerable children, especially those from low-income and working-class Black families, who rely on access to special education programs, well- trained teachers, smaller class sizes, literacy grants, and before and after school program,” said Jacqueline Cooper, president of the Black Alliance for Educationa­l Options.

The head of the Congressio­nal Hispanic Caucus, Rep. Michelle Lujan Grisham, D-N.M., said Trump’s budget “wastes billions of dollars on a costly and ineffectiv­e border wall and deportatio­n force” while proposing cuts to programs that have been essential to helping Hispanic families.

The budget seeks $2.6 billion for border security technology, including money to design and build a wall along the southern border. Trump repeatedly promised voters during the campaign that Mexico would pay for a wall, a notion that Mexican officials have rejected.

N A AC P o f f i c i a l s s a i d Trump’s proposal would gut civil rights enforcemen­t in the federal government.

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