
House passes Trump's $9 billion DOGE cuts package in another legislative win for president
The final tally was 216-213, with GOP Reps. Mike Turner and Brian Fitzpatrick the only Republicans to vote against the package.
Congress passed the package — which is part of Trump's cost-cutting Department of Government Efficiency efforts — under an obscure presidential budget law used to circumvent the Senate filibuster.
Trump is the first president in roughly 30 years to successfully use the maneuver, in a show of deference to the White House from the legislative branch – which is specifically given the power of the purse in the US Constitution.
Roughly $8 billion will be taken from congressionally approved foreign aid programs as part of the White House's efforts to dismantle the US Agency for International Development. Another $1.1 billion comes from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, which helps fund NPR and PBS.
The spending cuts package, which codifies some of DOGE's cuts into law, was a key priority for Trump and conservatives who have long railed against ballooning federal spending.
Ahead of final passage, however, the package ran into problems in the narrowly divided House, as some of the same members demanded a separate and unrelated promise from GOP leadership calling for more transparency on the Jeffrey Epstein files.
The issue of more transparency over the Epstein case has percolated for days on Capitol Hill, placing an awkward wedge between Trump and some of his most steadfast supporters in the House GOP. Speaker Mike Johnson and his leadership team spent hours on Thursday afternoon with members of the House Rules Committee negotiating over the path forward.
Ultimately, the committee voted Thursday night to advance the DOGE cuts package as well as a non-binding resolution that calls for the release of additional Jeffrey Epstein files following calls from a number of Republicans for more transparency surrounding the case. There is nothing that would compel this to the floor, however.
The spending cuts package is $400 million less than the initial package the House passed after Senators rejected a plan to cut PEPFAR, a global program to combat AIDS. But conservatives still voted for the package when it came up for its second vote in the House arguing it contained significant spending cuts in other areas of global health.
'It's disappointing that we're, you know, $37 trillion in debt. This, to me, was low hanging fruit. We saw how DOGE exposed a lot of this misuse of funds. It's disappointing that the Senate took it out,' Rep. Eric Burlison of Missouri said. 'It's better than nothing. So I think that at least we're able to make some spending reductions.'
Passage of the bill, however, now raises questions about how and whether Democrats and Republicans will be able to work together to keep the government funded past the September 30 deadline. Democratic Senate Leader Chuck Schumer argued the process has cast doubt on whether Democrats can work in good faith with Republican lawmakers who could agree to a spending deal now and pull future funding later.
Schumer said that he does not 'have much faith' in Senate Majority Leader John Thune's insistence that Senate Republicans will approach government funding in a bipartisan way, after White House Office of Management and Budget Director Russ Vought said earlier on Thursday that the appropriations process should be 'less bipartisan.'
'Every time they have tried to resist Trump and Vought, they have folded – as recently as last night. I don't have much faith in that,' Schumer told CNN.
GOP appropriators argue that the rescissions package shouldn't have any impact on those future spending talks and if it does, that is Democrats' own choice.
'It's up to them,' House Appropriations Chairman Tom Cole said.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
11 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Tacoma council sends minimum wage initiative to voters, but misses deadline for November election
Tacoma's City Council voted to send a minimum wage initiative to voters — but it's not clear when or if voters will see it on a ballot. The proposal, known as Initiative 2, calls for raising Tacoma's minimum wage to $20 per hour in a phased-in approach, up from the current minimum wage of $16.66. In a special meeting on Friday, the City Council declined to adopt Initiative 2 as written, instead opting to send it to the auditor's office for placement on the ballot in November. The only problem: the City Council missed the deadline to get it on the ballot. That deadline was Tuesday. In a response following the vote, Tacoma's Mayor declined to address the missed deadline or specify what could come next as a result. She did express concerns about the measure as written. 'I share the petitioners' commitment to living wages, access to hours, secure scheduling, and safer workplaces,' Mayor Victoria Woodards wrote. 'But as written, this initiative raises significant concerns about unintended consequences for our community.' The proposal, being referred to as the 'Tacoma Workers Bill of Rights,' also includes other worker protections, like requiring more advanced notice of assigned shifts and shift changes. Activists have spent months trying to get the initiative before voters. The United Food and Commercial Workers Union 367 and Tacoma Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) have spearheaded the effort. 'It's getting more expensive to just keep your head above water,' said Sean Arent, with Tacoma's DSA chapter, in March. Arent said it's also focused on improving employee stability throughout the city. 'Imagine that you're having to pay for the enormous costs of childcare when you can't even predict your schedule two weeks in advance,' he said in March. 'What does that do to people? It creates gaps in our in our system.' Both Mayor Victoria Woodards and Councilmember John Hines expressed concerns about the measure Friday in its current form, as it could pertain to nonprofits and city workers. 'Even with the best of intentions, not everybody has access to the full picture or the ability to anticipate every consequence of this policy,' Mayor Victoria Woodards said. 'I have real concerns about some of our employees in services that require people to be available at a moment's notice,' Hines said, adding he worried about the impact it could on critical services during someone's time of need. It's not immediately clear what the city will do next. Officials in the county elections office told KIRO 7 the city could place the initiative on the ballot in February, but the city would need to approve a new resolution in order to do that. The deadline to submit it would be in December. KIRO 7 asked city communications officials whether it was the city's intention to put forward a new resolution to get it on February's ballot. They could not provide an answer on Friday. In her statement Friday, the Mayor also provided information about a separate proposals she planned to put forward. It would establish a task force to examine labor standards in Tacoma. You can read more about the proposal here. Solve the daily Crossword
Yahoo
11 minutes ago
- Yahoo
A grassroots effort is underway to monitor ICE operations in Southern California
Pasadena, California — School librarian Sharon Nicholls and her neighbors have made their local Home Depot in Pasadena, California, a top priority. "I'm not an activist," Nicholls told CBS News. "We're all just regular people." Nicholls and her neighbors are part of a campaign called Adopt a Corner which comes to the Home Depot every morning to provide day laborers with information and watch out for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents. "We have vulnerable people standing out here, and we need to protect everybody in our community," Nicholls said. Home Depots have become a hotbed for immigration raids in recent months, so residents have vowed to remain a constant presence at dozens of locations across Los Angeles County, according to the National Day Laborer Organizing Network, a group which advocates for day laborers and is behind the Adopt a Corner campaign. Their actions come as protests over the Trump administration's immigration raids have moved from large gatherings in downtown Los Angeles earlier this summer, to now smaller rallies in the suburbs. At the Home Depot in Pasadena, the store's management has allowed the protesters to come into its doors. The protesters seem to have found common cause with the management and customers here. According to a CBS News poll last month, 51% of respondents disapprove of the Trump administration's deportation program, up from 41% in February. Approval among Republicans, however, remains overwhelmingly high. But 52% of those polled said the president is trying to deport more people than they had expected. "There are people asking, 'What can I do?'" said Pablo Alvarado, co-executive director of NDLON. His group offers virtual classes for those who oppose the raids and want to do something about them. "If there are no people documenting what's happening, then it's a disappearance, and families spend oftentimes weeks trying to find out where their loved ones are," Alvarado said. Aleca Le Blanc attended one of those classes just days before she shot cell phone video of a vendor clinging to a tree after being chased by an unidentified federal agent. "I like living in Los Angeles because I like living around people that don't look like me," Le Blanc said. "We're fellow Angelenos, doesn't matter if you've been here for a year or if you've been here for 25." Global stock markets react to Trump's sweeping tariffs in effect now Israel's Security Cabinet approves plan to take over Gaza City Why Trump is calling for Intel CEO's immediate resignation Solve the daily Crossword

Yahoo
11 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Trump and Putin to meet in Alaska next Friday
US President Donald Trump said Friday he would meet his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin in one week in Alaska, and suggested that an eventual deal between Moscow and Kyiv to end the war in Ukraine could involve swapping territory. The Kremlin later confirmed the summit, calling the location "quite logical." "The presidents themselves will undoubtedly focus on discussing options for achieving a long-term peaceful settlement of the Ukrainian crisis," Kremlin aide Yuri Ushakov said in a statement posted on Telegram. Tens of thousands of people have been killed since Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, with millions forced to flee their homes. Putin held consultations Friday with the leaders of China and India ahead of the summit with Trump, who has spent his first months in office trying to broker peace in Ukraine without making a breakthrough. "The highly anticipated meeting between myself, as President of the United States of America, and President Vladimir Putin, of Russia, will take place next Friday, August 15, 2025, in the Great State of Alaska," Trump said on his Truth Social site. He said earlier at the White House that "there'll be some swapping of territories to the betterment of both" Ukraine and Russia, without providing further details. - Trump invited to Russia - Three rounds of negotiations between Russia and Ukraine have failed to bear fruit, and it remains unclear whether a summit would bring peace any closer. Russian bombardments have forced millions of people to flee their homes and have destroyed swathes of eastern and southern Ukraine. Putin has resisted multiple calls from the United States, Europe and Kyiv for a ceasefire. He has also ruled out holding talks with Volodymyr Zelensky at this stage, a meeting the Ukrainian president says is necessary to make headway on a deal. At talks in Istanbul last month, Russian negotiators outlined hardline territorial demands for halting its advance -- calling for Kyiv to withdraw from some territory it controls and to renounce Western military support. The Alaska summit would be the first between sitting US and Russian presidents since Joe Biden met Putin in Geneva in June 2021. Trump and Putin last sat together in 2019 at a G20 summit meeting in Japan during Trump's first term. They have spoken by telephone several times since January. The Kremlin's Ushakov said that Trump had been invited to visit Russia. "Looking ahead, it is natural to hope that the next meeting between the presidents will be held on Russian territory. A corresponding invitation has already been sent to the US president," Ushakov said. - Witkoff visit - The Kremlin said Friday that Putin had updated Chinese President Xi Jinping on "the main results of his conversation" with US special envoy Steve Witkoff, who visited Moscow earlier this week. Xi expressed support for a "long-term" solution to the conflict, the Kremlin said. China's Xinhua state news agency quoted Xi as having told Putin: "China is glad to see Russia and the United States maintain contact, improve their relations, and promote a political settlement of the Ukraine crisis." Moscow and Beijing have deepened political, economic and military ties since the start of Russia's offensive in Ukraine. Putin also spoke by phone to India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi, after both countries condemned new US tariffs over New Delhi's oil purchases from Russia. Xi and Modi have both tried to tout their own peace initiatives for Ukraine, though they have gained little traction. Putin, a former KGB agent who has ruled Russia for more than 25 years, said in June that he was ready to meet Zelensky, but only during a "final phase" of negotiations on ending the conflict. In his regular evening address on Thursday, Zelensky said "it is only fair that Ukraine should be a participant in the negotiations." Donetsk governor Vadym Filashkin said Friday that families with children would be evacuated from 19 more villages in the region's east, where Russian forces have been advancing. The villages, home to hundreds of people, are all within about 20 miles (30 kilometers) of the front line. bur-wd/sst/dl