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Trump Administration's FY2027 Budget Proposes $73 Billion Cuts to Non-Defense Spending and Major Federal Agency Restructuring
Published 1 week ago
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Russ Vought, director of the Office of Management and Budget, is testifying before Congress this week on the Trump administrations fiscal year 2027 budget request. Alston and Bird reports that Vought begins the hearings, with other senior officials following, including sessions on April 16 before the Senate Budget Committee and House Budget Committee.
The budget, released April 3, proposes deep cuts to non defense discretionary spending by 73 billion dollars compared to last year, according to WRobertPearson on Substack. Vought stated it builds on fiscal 2026 reductions to eliminate ineffective federal agencies that do not serve a useful purpose. Civilian agencies face a 10 percent cut overall, with projections to slash non defense spending by 24 percent over the next decade.
Key reforms include 50 million dollars for Agriculture Department reorganization and relocations, unifying federal firefighting into one agency, privatizing airport screenings at small airports, consolidating Department of Homeland Security offices, and eliminating an office on federal contractor oversight. The White House budget boosts federal law enforcement funding by 15 percent, including more Homeland Security agents, federal prosecutors, Drug Enforcement Administration hires, Secret Service expansions, and a 12 percent increase for Justice Department immigration review courtroom space.
The budget eliminates the Minority Business Development Agency, citing its divisive projects, and transfers education programs to the Labor Department to reduce bureaucracy. It also cuts National Science Foundation funding by 54 percent, eliminates its Social, Behavioral, and Economic Sciences Directorate, and proposes nearly 50 percent cuts to NASA Science, drawing criticism from science groups and lawmakers like Representative Judy Chu and Representative Don Bacon.
Media Matters notes dozens of Project 2025 proposals in the budget, with Vought as a key author, targeting what it calls woke policies over 30 times. Separately, the Center for Biological Diversity sued on April 13 seeking Voughts calendars and those of other officials to detail roles in environmental rollbacks.
Vought wrote in the White House budget document that fiscal futility is ending under President Trumps leadership, achieving real savings.
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The budget, released April 3, proposes deep cuts to non defense discretionary spending by 73 billion dollars compared to last year, according to WRobertPearson on Substack. Vought stated it builds on fiscal 2026 reductions to eliminate ineffective federal agencies that do not serve a useful purpose. Civilian agencies face a 10 percent cut overall, with projections to slash non defense spending by 24 percent over the next decade.
Key reforms include 50 million dollars for Agriculture Department reorganization and relocations, unifying federal firefighting into one agency, privatizing airport screenings at small airports, consolidating Department of Homeland Security offices, and eliminating an office on federal contractor oversight. The White House budget boosts federal law enforcement funding by 15 percent, including more Homeland Security agents, federal prosecutors, Drug Enforcement Administration hires, Secret Service expansions, and a 12 percent increase for Justice Department immigration review courtroom space.
The budget eliminates the Minority Business Development Agency, citing its divisive projects, and transfers education programs to the Labor Department to reduce bureaucracy. It also cuts National Science Foundation funding by 54 percent, eliminates its Social, Behavioral, and Economic Sciences Directorate, and proposes nearly 50 percent cuts to NASA Science, drawing criticism from science groups and lawmakers like Representative Judy Chu and Representative Don Bacon.
Media Matters notes dozens of Project 2025 proposals in the budget, with Vought as a key author, targeting what it calls woke policies over 30 times. Separately, the Center for Biological Diversity sued on April 13 seeking Voughts calendars and those of other officials to detail roles in environmental rollbacks.
Vought wrote in the White House budget document that fiscal futility is ending under President Trumps leadership, achieving real savings.
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