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OMB Director Russ Vought Faces Congressional Scrutiny Over Trump's 2027 Budget Cuts to NIH and Federal Agencies
Published 1 week ago
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Russ Vought, director of the Office of Management and Budget, faces intense scrutiny this week as he testifies on President Trump's fiscal year 2027 budget request. According to Alston and Bird's Public Policy Look Ahead for the week of April 13, Vought begins congressional hearings starting with the House Budget Committee on April 15, followed by the Senate Budget Committee on April 16. The American Association for Cancer Research reports that Vought's House appearance addresses proposed cuts to National Institutes of Health funding, including a twelve percent reduction to forty-one point one billion dollars from fiscal year 2026 levels, sparking concerns over slowed grant awards and research delays.
The budget, released April 1 and detailed in the White House document signed by Vought, emphasizes slashing non-defense discretionary spending by seventy-three billion dollars, eliminating ineffective agencies, and reorganizing departments like Agriculture and Health and Human Services. W Robert Pearson's Substack analysis quotes Vought saying the plan builds on fiscal year 2026 cuts to enter a new era of budgeting, projecting twenty-four percent reductions at non-defense agencies over the next decade. The American Institute of Physics notes Vought's hearings amid broader science funding tensions, including frozen National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration grants due to Office of Management and Budget holds.
Adding to the spotlight, the Center for Biological Diversity filed a lawsuit on April 13 seeking Vought's calendars and those of other officials, alleging delays in releasing Freedom of Information Act records. This comes as the Department of Homeland Security shutdown hits day fifty-eight, with Senate efforts using budget reconciliation to fund immigration agencies.
Vought's role underscores ambitious reforms amid fiscal debates, balancing defense increases with deep domestic cuts.
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The budget, released April 1 and detailed in the White House document signed by Vought, emphasizes slashing non-defense discretionary spending by seventy-three billion dollars, eliminating ineffective agencies, and reorganizing departments like Agriculture and Health and Human Services. W Robert Pearson's Substack analysis quotes Vought saying the plan builds on fiscal year 2026 cuts to enter a new era of budgeting, projecting twenty-four percent reductions at non-defense agencies over the next decade. The American Institute of Physics notes Vought's hearings amid broader science funding tensions, including frozen National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration grants due to Office of Management and Budget holds.
Adding to the spotlight, the Center for Biological Diversity filed a lawsuit on April 13 seeking Vought's calendars and those of other officials, alleging delays in releasing Freedom of Information Act records. This comes as the Department of Homeland Security shutdown hits day fifty-eight, with Senate efforts using budget reconciliation to fund immigration agencies.
Vought's role underscores ambitious reforms amid fiscal debates, balancing defense increases with deep domestic cuts.
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