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Trump agencies tell Congress what to chop in 22 percent budget slashing

Trump agencies tell Congress what to chop in 22 percent budget slashing

Yahooa day ago

Federal agencies began sending the nitty-gritty of President Donald Trump's budget proposal to Congress on Friday, detailing which programs he wants Republicans to cut deeply — or wipe out entirely — when they vote to fund the government in September.
Expanding upon the so-called skinny budget the White House transmitted to Capitol Hill earlier this month, the new documents detail the White House's ambitions for spending cuts across government agencies. They show which accounts the president wants GOP lawmakers to target as Trump seeks non-defense funding cuts of more than 22 percent in the upcoming fiscal year and a flat military budget.
In 'budget in brief' documents, agencies, including the Environmental Protection Agency, along with the departments of Education and Health and Human Services, detailed their requests to cut billions of dollars from their budgets. The White House is expected to post more detailed budget documents later.
Among the proposed cuts to most federal departments, the administration is asking Congress to slash $12 billion from federal education programs, $5 billion from agriculture efforts and a total of more than $60 billion from health, housing and community development work.
Senior GOP members of both the House and Senate have already scorned Trump's initial budget request, heightening the conflict between Republicans on Capitol Hill and those in the Trump administration as Congress races to head off a government shutdown in four months.
Just how deeply congressional Republicans are willing to cut federal programs will start to become clear next week, when House GOP appropriators plan to debut the first of a dozen annual funding bills. That includes the measure that covers agriculture programs and the Food and Drug Administration, and the bill that funds programs supporting military construction and veterans.
The White House has not threatened to veto funding bills that exceed the president's request. But Trump's budget chief has said the administration hasn't ruled out continuing to use 'impoundment' to withhold congressionally approved funding the president doesn't want to spend.
'Impoundment is still on the table and something we will consider,' White House budget director Russ Vought said this week on Fox Business, repeating what he said earlier this month at the time of the skinny budget's release.
That threat has irked Republican lawmakers who argue that the tactic is illegal under the 51-year-old law created to prevent presidents from undermining the 'power of the purse' Congress is granted under the Constitution.
Whatever government funding legislation makes it to Trump's desk in the fall will first need the support of several Democrats in the Senate, where Minority Leader Chuck Schumer is under pressure to hold the line against drastic cuts after caving in March to help advance the stopgap Republicans unilaterally crafted after abandoning bipartisan negotiations.
Attracting Democratic support in the Senate is likely to require higher funding levels that prompt Republican opposition on the other side of the Capitol, House Appropriations Chair Tom Cole acknowledged this month.
'Anything they do to get Democratic support in the Senate — which they have to do under their own rules — will almost certainly cost me Republican support over here,' said the Oklahoma Republican.
That was not the case earlier this year when House Republicans mustered near-unanimous GOP support in their chamber to pass a funding patch through September, but several House Republicans have already warned leaders that they wouldn't back another stopgap this fall. Lawmakers in both parties also want to pass updated funding levels, while locking in earmarks to ensure federal cash flows to specific projects in their districts.
'I don't want to do it again,' Cole told reporters this month about the prospect of another continuing resolution. 'I want to deal.'

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Putin's tough stance on a Ukraine peace plan shows his resolve on Russia's demands
Putin's tough stance on a Ukraine peace plan shows his resolve on Russia's demands

Associated Press

time21 minutes ago

  • Associated Press

Putin's tough stance on a Ukraine peace plan shows his resolve on Russia's demands

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Those talks, the first since botched negotiations in the opening weeks of the war, came after Putin effectively rejected a 30-day truce proposed by Trump that was accepted by Kyiv. Russia had linked such a ceasefire to a halt in Ukraine's mobilization effort and a freeze on Western arms supplies. Putin proposed talks to discuss conditions for a possible truce. Trump quickly prodded Kyiv to accept the offer, but the negotiations yielded no immediate progress except an agreement to exchange 1,000 prisoners each. Russia offered to hold another round of talks Monday in Istanbul, where it said it will present a memorandum setting conditions for ending hostilities. It refused to share the document before the negotiations. Some observers see the talks as an attempt by Putin to assuage Trump's growing impatience. 'Putin has devised a way to offer Trump an interim, tangible outcome from Washington's peace efforts without making any real concessions,' said Tatiana Stanovaya of the Carnegie Russia Eurasia Center. Facing Western accusations of stalling, the Kremlin responded that the conflict can't be resolved quickly and emphasized the need to address its 'root causes.' When Putin invaded Ukraine, he said the move was needed to prevent Ukraine from joining NATO and protect Russian speakers in the country -– arguments strongly rejected by Kyiv and its Western allies as a cover for an unprovoked act of aggression. Along with those demands, Putin also wants limits on Ukraine's sovereignty, including the size of Ukraine's military, and for Kyiv to end what Moscow sees as glorification of Ukraine's World War II-era nationalist leaders, some of whom sided with the invading forces of Nazi Germany over the Soviet leadership in the Kremlin. A Kremlin negotiator who's been there before Seeking to underline that Moscow will press home its initial demands, Putin appointed his aide Vladimir Medinsky to lead the Russian delegation in Istanbul. He also led the Russian side in the 2022 talks. Kyiv reportedly has asked the U.S. to encourage Putin to replace him. The soft-spoken, 54-year-old career bureaucrat, who was born in Ukraine, ascended through the Kremlin ranks after writing a series of books exposing purported Western plots against Russia. In an interview with Russian state television after the May 16 talks, Medinsky pointed to Russia's 18th century war with Sweden that lasted 21 years, a signal that Moscow is prepared to fight for a long time until its demands are met. 'History repeats itself in a remarkable way,' he said.

Japan's Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba mulls Trump trade meeting before G7, says Yomiuri newspaper
Japan's Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba mulls Trump trade meeting before G7, says Yomiuri newspaper

CNBC

time25 minutes ago

  • CNBC

Japan's Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba mulls Trump trade meeting before G7, says Yomiuri newspaper

Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba is considering visiting Washington to meet President Donald Trump before a mid-month summit of the Group of Seven nations as he seeks a trade deal, the Yomiuri newspaper reported on Sunday. Japanese officials see signs of progress on easing Trump's tariffs after repeated visits by top tariff negotiator Ryosei Akazawa, and say the U.S. side has shown strong interest in Japan's proposals, the Yomiuri said, citing Japanese government officials it did not name. Economy Minister Akazawa will return to Washington for more talks late this week, after which a decision will be made on a U.S. trip by Ishiba, the newspaper said. The White House and the Japanese Prime Minister's Office did not immediately respond to requests for comment outside business hours. Japan, a major U.S. ally, faces a 24% tariff from next month unless it can negotiate a bilateral deal. It is also scrambling to find ways to get Washington to exempt its automakers from 25% tariffs on automobiles, Japan's biggest industry. Some Japanese government officials hope an agreement can be announced in time for President Trump's birthday on June 14, the Yomiuri said. Akazawa, after meeting Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, said on Friday the two sides had "agreed to accelerate the talks and hold another round ahead of the G7 summit," to be held from June 15 to 17 in Canada. But he said there would be no deal without U.S. concessions on tariffs, including on autos. Ishiba has said bilateral negotiations were progressing on trade expansion, non-tariff measures and economic security, while Tokyo has mentioned possible increases in its purchases of U.S. military equipment and energy, as well as cooperation on shipbuilding and repairing U.S. warships in Japan.

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