President Trump unveiled a $4.8 trillion budget proposal for the 2021 fiscal year, thought to be a taste of his re-election strategy, notable for steep reductions in social services like Medicaid, disability insurance, and higher budgets for defense, including the president’s promised southern border wall. The plan seeks to reduce deficits by $4.6 trillion in the next 10 years.
The plan, which needs Congressional approval, proposes increasing military spending slightly and lowering non-defense spending by nearly 5 percent, which seems to buck the agreement made by Congressional leaders and the White House this summer that passed both chambers with bipartisan support.
Trump’s budget proposal cuts spending on federal disability benefits, student loan forgiveness, foreign aid spending, and eliminates funding for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. It will also further extend the income tax cuts that are currently set to expire in 2025. Other departments receiving a big cut: the Environmental Protection Agency, whose budget would be slashed by 26 percent, and a 9 percent reduction for the Health and Human Services department, which includes the National Institutes for Health and the Centers for Disease Control and Protection. CDC cuts would not be expected to include funding for infectious disease activities
Senator Mike Enzi (R-Wyo.), Chairman of the Senate Budget Committee, said in a statement that “presidents’ budgets are a reflection of Administration priorities, but in the end, they are just a list of suggestions, as the power of the purse rests with Congress. Bipartisan consensus will be necessary to bring our debt and deficits under control.”
The plan would also cut more than $5.5 billion in spending for the Education Department, which is slightly less than what was proposed last year. Those domestic spending slashes will likely be rejected by lawmakers and stand in contrast to messaging from the eventual 2020 Democratic nominee.
Trump also promised to send astronauts to the moon by 2024, a promise he presumably hopes to fill with a 12 percent budget increase in NASA funding.
Congressman John Yarmuth (D-Ky. 3rd District) who chairs the House Committee on the Budget said in a statement that the plan, by a “destructive and irrational president,” is backpedaling on a bipartisan deal. “He has broken his promises to the American people. Defaulted on the bipartisan budget deal he made with Congress. And we will stand firm against this warped ‘vision’ for our nation’s future,” Yarmuth said.
Though the president’s budget plan sheds light on his policy ambitions, a Democrat-controlled House means a spending bill in the Senate would require bipartisan support, which looks unlikely.
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer tweeted, “With his latest budget proposal, it’s hard to imagine that President Trump could do any more to double-cross the very American workers and middle-class families he promised to help just last week in his State of the Union address.” He noted that by proposing “severe cuts to Medicaid and Medicare, President Trump’s latest budget is simply a continuation of his war to rip away health care from millions of Americans.”
The budget plan carries weight for the president’s platform heading into an election year, although it’s a shift from his 2016 campaign when he promised to protect funding for Medicare and Medicaid. The president even stated via a tweet as recently as the Saturday that he would not be "touching" Medicare before the release of the proposed budget that does just that.
The school shooting in Texas that left 19 children and 2 teachers dead has reignited the debate over gun control.
The tragedy in Uvalde is the deadliest school shooting in nearly a decade and marks the latest in a string of mass shootings in the country. Jared Moskowitz, Broward County Commissioner and candidate for Congress in FL-23, joined Cheddar's Opening Bell to discuss why gun control measures are stalled in the Senate, and where legislation can move forward from here.
Police and detectives are still investigating the tragic school shooting in Uvalde, Texas that killed 19 children and two adults. Cheddar News was joined by Kirk Burkhalter, professor at New York Law School and former NYPD detective to gain some insight on what investigators are looking for and what comes next.
Texas authorities say the gunman who massacred 21 people at an elementary school was in the building for over an hour before he was killed by law enforcement officers.
Join Cheddar News as we break down the top headlines for Thursday, May 26 including updates on the Texas school shooting, President Joe Biden's executive order on police reform, and a recount in the Pennsylvania GOP Senate primary.
Representative Morgan Griffith of Virginia rebuked words from the FDA commissioner that could have been construed as blaming parents for stockpiling baby formula exacerbating the shortage.
Cheddar News reporter Megan Pratz brings the latest from the scene of yesterday's horrific school shooting at a Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas. Now the second-deadliest school shooting in U.S. history with 19 children and two adults killed, Pratz goes into comments by Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, details about the deceased shooter, and reactions from members of the community.
The Robb Elementary School mass shooting killing 19 children and two adults in Uvalde, Texas pm Tuesday was the deadliest school shooting since the 2012 Sandy Hook massacre in Newtown, Connecticut, and came just 10 days after the grocery store shooting in Buffalo, New York. Nelson Vergara, the founder and CEO of 360 Protective Solutions, joined Cheddar’s Opening Bell to discuss. "Right now what law enforcement is concentrating on is trying to trace his steps as to what motivated the gunman to act the way he did. What it boils down to just trying to figure out what led to his motivation to do such a horrific act.”
An recently conducted AP-NORC poll found that majorities of the Black and Hispanic populations in the U.S. still find themselves either somewhat worried or extremely worried over the pandemic, while more than half of white Americans responded with either being not too worried or not worried at all. Dr. Chris Pernell, the chief strategic integration and health equity officer at University Hospital, joined Cheddar News to talk about how perceptions of COVID-19 differ between groups of Americans. "We’re still seeing people get infected, and because of the toll of the disproportionate impact, we have concerns among the Black and brown community about whether or not they have an increased risk of exposure because of where they work, because of the use of public transportation, because they live in homes that they may not be able to safely quarantine and or isolate in, and because they have at baseline chronic health conditions that may make coronavirus more severe in those persons," she said.
Judith Enck, a former regional administrator for the EPA and the president of Beyond Plastics, joined Cheddar News to talk about the role of plastics in the climate crisis and California's investigation of ExxonMobil and other oil companies for misleading the public on the ability to recycle plastics. "The reason why petrochemical companies like Exxon have gotten away with selling more and more plastic is that they've lied to the public and told us don't worry about all those negative upstream impacts and downstream impacts of plastics. Just be sure to recycle it. Well, guess what? Plastics largely are not recycled," Enck said.