USA TODAY US Edition

Trump’s budget probably dead on arrival

Program cuts, wall boost face even deeper divide

- John Fritze

WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump called for deep cuts in environmen­tal and safety net programs, billions more for his border wall and a huge boost for the military in a $4.75 trillion 2020 budget proposal that is unlikely to gain traction in Congress.

Trump delivered his first budget under a divided government Monday, a road map that would not balance the books for 15 years despite deep reductions. The proposal also called for $8.6 billion for Trump’s border wall, a request Democrats flatly rejected.

“Congress has been ignoring the president’s spending reductions for the last two years,” Trump’s top budget aide, Russell Vought, told reporters when pressed for an explanatio­n about why the budget anticipate­s a $1.1 trillion deficit next year.

Even before Democrats claimed control of the House, similar proposals by Trump failed in Congress. The schism between the president’s wish list and actual government spending only deepened after a dispute over the border wall led to a 35-day partial government shutdown that ended in January.

“This is not a serious proposal,” said Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., the top Democrat on the Senate Appropriat­ions Committee.

Presidenti­al budgets, required by the Budget and Accounting Act of 1921, for decades have had more to do with politics than policy. With the 2020 campaign underway, the document gives Trump an opportunit­y to lay out a vision he can trumpet to supporters.

The White House is eager to sell three messages with the president’s third budget: that Trump hasn’t given up on building his long-promised border wall, that he wants to increase military

Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt.

spending and that he hopes to slash just about everything else.

The president requested $8.6 billion more for his wall, just weeks after Congress failed to approve his demand for $5.7 billion. With both sides dug in, the latest proposal is certain to go nowhere. Trump declared a national emergency in February, a move the White House says will free up billions more for a border barrier.

Trump also is requesting billions more in spending at the Defense Department – one of the few priorities that could gain some attention from lawmakers. After initially considerin­g Pentagon cuts last year, the White House embraced a proposal to increase the Defense Department’s budget 5 percent to $750 billion.

Other proposals include:

❚ A $2.8 billion, or 31 percent, reduction in for the Environmen­tal Protection Agency and a $327 billion cut to safetynet programs. Some of that reduction would be carried out by imposing a work requiremen­t for food stamps, Medicaid and other programs.

❚ Nearly $315 million to hire an additional 1,000 Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t officers and 128 immigratio­n court prosecutin­g attorneys.

❚ Almost $300 million toward the goal eliminatin­g nearly all new infections of HIV/AIDS within 10 years.

Trump has proposed many of the same changes before, without success. Last year’s budget, which came at a time when Republican­s controlled both the House and Senate, included $18 billion for the border wall. His 2017 budget proposed eliminatin­g 62 federal agencies entirely. Congress largely ignored those requests and many others.

“This is not a serious proposal.”

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