The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

ON THE BUDGET CHOPPING BLOCK

Food stamps, Medicaid among programs slated for cuts in Trump’s budget

- By Andrew Taylor

“The budget’s a starting point. We’ll go to work from there.” Sen. John Hoeven, R-N.D., member of the Senate Appropriat­ions Committee “We think it’s wrongheade­d. Production agricultur­e is in the worst slump since the depression — 50 percent drop in the net income for producers. They need this safety net.” Rep. Mike Conaway, R-Texas, chairman of the House Agricultur­e Committee

President Donald Trump will unveil a proposed budget this week that would drive millions of people off food stamps and cut Medicaid, targeting the social safety-net programs for the poor in a new wave of spending cuts.

Trump’s blueprint for the 2018 budget year comes out Tuesday. It includes reductions to benefit programs such as Medicaid, the government insurance program for the poorest and many disabled Americans; federal employee pensions, welfare benefits and farm subsidies. Even before its release, it was widely panned by Republican­s and Democrats.

All told, according to people familiar with the plan, Trump’s budget includes $1.7 trillion over 10 years in cuts from such so-called mandatory programs. That includes cuts to pensions for federal workers and higher contributi­ons toward those pension benefits, as well as

cuts to refundable tax credits paid to the working poor. People familiar with the plan were not authorized to discuss it by name and spoke on condition of anonymity.

Cuts include a whopping $193 billion from food stamps over the coming decade — a cut of more than 25 percent — implemente­d by cutting back eligibilit­y and imposing additional work requiremen­ts, according to talking points circulated by the White House. The program presently serves about 42 million people.

The food stamp cuts are several times larger than those attempted by House Republican­s a few years back and comprise the bulk of a 10-year, $274 billion proposal that’s labeled as welfare reform.

The fleshed-out proposal follows up on an unpopular partial release in March that targeted the budgets of domestic agencies and foreign aid for cuts averaging 10 percent — and made lawmakers in both parties recoil.

The new cuts are unpopular as well.

“We think it’s wrongheade­d,” said Rep. Mike Conaway, R-Texas, chairman of the House Agricultur­e Committee, when asked about looming cuts to farm programs. “Production agricultur­e is in the worst slump since the depression — 50 percent drop in the net income for producers. They need this safety net.”

Trump’s budget plan promises to balance the federal ledger by the end of a 10-year window, even while exempting Social Security and Medicare retirement benefits from cuts. To achieve balance, the plan by White House budget director Mick Mulvaney relies on optimistic estimates of economic growth, and the surge in revenues that would result, while abandoning Trump’s promise of a “massive tax cut.”

Instead, the Trump tax plan promises an overhaul that would cut tax rates but rely on erasing tax breaks and economic growth to end up as “revenue neutral.” It would create three tax brackets — 10 percent, 25 percent and 35 percent — instead of the current seven.

Trump is also targeting the Medicaid health program that provides care to the poor and disabled, and nursing home care to millions of older people who could not otherwise afford it.

The House had a bitter debate on health care before a razor-thin 217-213 passage in early May of a GOP health bill that included more than $800 billion in Medicaid cuts over the coming decade. Key Republican­s are not interested in another round of cuts to the program.

“I would think that the health care bill is our best policy statement on Medicaid going forward,” said Rep. Greg Walden, R-Ore., chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, which has jurisdicti­on over the program.

A full budget submission by the administra­tion to Congress is months overdue and follows the release two months ago of an outline for the discretion­ary portion of the budget, covering defense, education, foreign aid, housing and environmen­tal programs, among others. Their budgets pass each year through annual appropriat­ions bills.

An earlier blueprint from Trump proposed a $54 billion, 10 percent increase for the military above an existing cap on Pentagon spending, financed by an equal cut to nondefense programs. Those cuts rang alarm bells for many Republican­s, who were particular­ly upset about proposals to eliminate community developmen­t block grants, slash medical research and eviscerate foreign aid.

Trump’s GOP allies rejected such cuts when wrapping up long-overdue legislatio­n for the current budget year, which ends Sept. 30. There’s little sign they will have a change of heart now, especially with Trump’s administra­tion in turmoil and his poll ratings at historic lows.

“The budget’s a starting point. We’ll go to work from there,” said Sen. John Hoeven, R-N.D., a member of the Senate Appropriat­ions Committee.

Republican­s controllin­g Congress have delayed action on their companion budget measure, waiting for Trump to go first. This year’s budget debate, Republican­s hope, would grease the way for a major overhaul of the loophole-cluttered tax system. But House conservati­ves also want to embark on a round of cuts to benefit programs and are open to Trump’s suggestion­s for cuts to mandatory programs such as federal employee pensions.

Presidenti­al budgets are mere suggestion­s, and the White House has discretion to assume higher economic growth rates of up to 3 percent or so under Trump’s agenda of tax changes, loosened regulation­s and infrastruc­ture spending.

 ?? CAROLYN KASTER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? On May 19, a GPO worker stacks copies of “Analytical Perspectiv­es Budget of the U.S. Government Fiscal Year 2018” onto a pallet at the U.S. Government Publishing Office’s (GPO) plant in Washington.
CAROLYN KASTER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS On May 19, a GPO worker stacks copies of “Analytical Perspectiv­es Budget of the U.S. Government Fiscal Year 2018” onto a pallet at the U.S. Government Publishing Office’s (GPO) plant in Washington.

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