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Vought's Budget Moves Face Pushback: Office of Management and Budget Director Navigates Challenges
Published 1 month, 3 weeks ago
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Russ Vought, Director of the Office of Management and Budget, faces recent pushback on his budget moves. Government Executive reports that Congress rejected Voughts request for a 13 percent funding increase and four percent more staff at the Office of Management and Budget, even as he leads widespread federal workforce reductions. Lawmakers kept the office flat funded in the latest fiscal year 2026 spending package, which covers departments like State and Treasury.
A federal judge ruled Voughts decision to cancel billions in clean energy grants for states that did not vote for President Trump illegal, according to Associated Press reporter Matthew Daly. The move violated the Fifth Amendment, as Law and Crime detailed, because it targeted states based on election results during a government shutdown.
Politico notes another judge blocked the Trump administration from shutting down a major offshore wind project in New England, tying into Voughts oversight of such cuts.
On the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau front, Banking Dive says Vought, as acting director, conceded by requesting 145 million dollars from the Federal Reserve for the bureaus second quarter fiscal year 2026 needs. This followed a court order from Judge Amy Berman Jackson, who criticized efforts to defund the agency. Vought disagrees but complied to avoid shutdown accusations amid ongoing lawsuits from the National Treasury Employees Union.
Lawfaremedia tracks a lawsuit by the American Federation of Government Employees against Vought over his 2025 governmentwide workforce reduction plan.
These developments highlight tensions as Congress advances minibus funding bills to avoid a January 30 shutdown.
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A federal judge ruled Voughts decision to cancel billions in clean energy grants for states that did not vote for President Trump illegal, according to Associated Press reporter Matthew Daly. The move violated the Fifth Amendment, as Law and Crime detailed, because it targeted states based on election results during a government shutdown.
Politico notes another judge blocked the Trump administration from shutting down a major offshore wind project in New England, tying into Voughts oversight of such cuts.
On the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau front, Banking Dive says Vought, as acting director, conceded by requesting 145 million dollars from the Federal Reserve for the bureaus second quarter fiscal year 2026 needs. This followed a court order from Judge Amy Berman Jackson, who criticized efforts to defund the agency. Vought disagrees but complied to avoid shutdown accusations amid ongoing lawsuits from the National Treasury Employees Union.
Lawfaremedia tracks a lawsuit by the American Federation of Government Employees against Vought over his 2025 governmentwide workforce reduction plan.
These developments highlight tensions as Congress advances minibus funding bills to avoid a January 30 shutdown.
Thank you for tuning in, listeners. Please subscribe for more updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
For more http://www.quietplease.ai
Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI