Trump Administration Axes $400 Million In State Unemployment System Upgrades, Calls It 'Wasteful': Report
The White House has reportedly chosen to withdraw $400 million in funding that was set aside for states to upgrade their unemployment insurance systems.
What Happened: Congress originally designated these funds as part of the $1.9 trillion coronavirus relief package passed in 2021. The goal was to upgrade state unemployment systems, which had been overwhelmed during the pandemic, leading to significant fraud and delays in payments to beneficiaries, reported Axios.
Trending: Maker of the $60,000 foldable home has 3 factory buildings, 600+ houses built, and big plans to solve housing —
Last week, the Labor Department informed Congress that the grants are being discontinued. The Department's report revealed that about 28% of the funds allocated to states—amounting to $219 million—were dedicated to promoting equity. Axios mentioned that 'equity' in this case refers to efforts aimed at making the unemployment insurance system more accessible and easier to navigate, rather than necessarily in the context of DEI.
'When I left in December, states had spent about $100 million of the $219 million specifically for equity but only $2 million of the $204 million for IT,' mentioned Andrew Stettner, who led the modernization efforts during the Biden administration.
Stettner stated that 18 states are presently working on updates to their systems. He warned that pulling this aid now could be disastrous for states just starting these projects.
The Labor Department defended the decision by telling Axios that the grants were 'squandered' on 'bureaucratic and wasteful projects that focused on equitable access rather than advancing access for all Americans in need.'Why It Matters: This decision by the Trump administration is a part of its goal to cut fraud and wasteful spending. Elon Musk, who stepped down on Wednesday, was spearheading these initiatives under the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE).
During his time, DOGE claimed to save $160 billion by eliminating wasteful government spending. However, a recent analysis by the nonpartisan nonprofit agency, Partnership for Public Service (PSP), revealed that DOGE's actions could cost taxpayers up to $135 billion this fiscal year.
The analysis included costs related to paid leave for federal employees, rehiring of wrongly dismissed workers, and lost productivity. The figure does not account for the costs of defending multiple lawsuits against DOGE's actions or the estimated loss in tax collections resulting from IRS staff reductions.
Read Next:
Hasbro, MGM, and Skechers trust this AI marketing firm — Invest before it's too late.
Deloitte's fastest-growing software company partners with Amazon, Walmart & Target – Many are rushing to grab 4,000 of its pre-IPO shares for just $0.30/share!
Image via Shutterstock
Send To MSN: Send to MSN
UNLOCKED: 5 NEW TRADES EVERY WEEK. Click now to get top trade ideas daily, plus unlimited access to cutting-edge tools and strategies to gain an edge in the markets.
Get the latest stock analysis from Benzinga?
This article Trump Administration Axes $400 Million In State Unemployment System Upgrades, Calls It 'Wasteful': Report originally appeared on Benzinga.com
© 2025 Benzinga.com. Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Forbes
24 minutes ago
- Forbes
Stablecoin Policy's Web Is Full Of Characters
There has been a web of intrigue playing out in the stablecoin policy sphere. The Senate Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for U.S. Stablecoins Act is back on track. Debate will continue when Congress returns from recess next week, and a vote is likely to follow posthaste. Just as the policy process has been dramatic, the stablecoin advocacy ecosystem has been full of theatrics. Agencies, banks, crypto companies, public institutions are among the cast of characters in the stablecoin mesh. A stablecoin, a digital dollar, is an instrument whose time has come. Previous proposals were far less innovative. For decades, plans to leverage the post office to provide access to bank services to the underserved floated across progressive circles in Washington. More recently, the 2023 launch of FedNow, an instant payments system built by the Federal Reserve, did not live up to expectations. The urgency to fill this gap has been mounting for a long time. Perhaps it was the obstacles the federal government faced as they tried to deliver stimulus checks to the most vulnerable during COVID that solidified stablecoins as a viable solution. Stablecoins do not represent a total disruption. The revenue model is essentially the same as traditional financial institutions. Companies invest their reserves and subsequently profit from the gains. Is that synergy a good thing? It depends on who you ask. The legacy banking system is entrenched and tensions are high in some corners. Independent Community Bankers of America President and CEO Rebeca Romero Rainey said this in a statement before the latest GENIUS Act vote. "ICBA urges the Senate to ensure the GENIUS Act provides regulatory clarity while including necessary guardrails to protect against the negative economic consequences that would result from community bank disintermediation. ICBA reiterates our concerns outlined for the Congress since the beginning of this debate. With community banks using deposits to make 60% of the nation's small-business loans and 80% of banking industry agricultural lending, mitigating the risk of retail deposits migrating out of community banks — which have proven commitments to their communities and local credit creation — is critical.' Big banks, however, want a piece of the pie. JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, Citi, Wells Fargo, and others are exploring the possibility of creating a unified stablecoin according to news reports. There's also web spinning in the crypto native industry. After rumors spread recently that Coinbase and Ripple were vying to acquire Circle, the largest stablecoin company in the United States just squashed speculation by announcing their IPO will go live next week on June 4. Oversight of this messy web will rest in the purview of the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency. 'I'm also focused on expanding responsible bank activities involving digital assets to support the 50 million Americans who now hold some form of cryptocurrency. Regulated banks must keep up with this transformation,' Acting Comptroller Rodney E. Hood recently said in a speech this month. New OCC guidance states that 'crypto-asset custody, certain stablecoin activities, and participation in independent node verification networks such as distributed ledger are permissible for national banks and federal savings associations.' The stage is set for centralized and decentralized finance to fuel the sector. But will frictions fester? The stablecoin policy web is just commencing and will likely get more complex after legislation is signed into law.
Yahoo
43 minutes ago
- Yahoo
The ‘revenge tax' buried deep in the budget bill could turn a trade war into a ‘capital war,' analyst says
Section 899 of the 'One Big Beautiful Bill' moving through Congress has raised growing alarms on Wall Street, after the once-obscure provision was initially overshadowed by the budget proposal's estimated impact on the deficit. Deutsche Bank warned that what's been dubbed the 'revenge tax' could further harm the attractiveness of U.S. assets. As Wall Street continued digesting the myriad line items in the 1,000-page budget bill that passed recently, one part has triggered an especially acute case of heartburn. Section 899 of the 'One Big Beautiful Bill' moving through Congress has raised growing alarms, after the once-obscure provision was initially overshadowed by the budget's estimated impact on the deficit. It has been dubbed the 'revenge tax' because it would increase rates for individuals and companies from countries with tax policies branded as 'discriminatory.' That means foreign investors, who own trillions of dollars in U.S. assets, could face higher levies on passive income like dividends and interest payments. Investors have already shifted toward Europe and China as President Donald Trump's aggressive tariff agenda has eroded the idea 'American exceptionalism.' Meanwhile, foreign investors are showing signs of a buyer's strike, shunning U.S. assets. For George Saravelos, head of FX research at Deutsche Bank, the idea of a revenge tax could make them even less attractive. It's also notable in the wake of a U.S. trade court's ruling Tuesday that invalidated Trump's reciprocal tariffs, as Section 899 could represent an alternative tool. 'We see this legislation as creating the scope for the US administration to transform a trade war into a capital war if it so wishes, a development that is highly relevant in the context of today's court decision constraining President Trump on trade policy,' Saravelos wrote in a note. He pointed out that Section 899 uses taxation on foreign investors as leverage to advance U.S. economic priorities and only has to meet a low bar before it can be enforced. It would also make covering deficits more difficult by lowering the de facto yield foreign government earn from U.S. Treasury bonds by nearly 100 basis points, Saravelos estimated. While the ultimate impact could be less than that, the mere introduction of more uncertainty and complexity around investing in U.S. assets 'undermines the attractiveness of dollar inflows at a time when this is already put in to question,' he warned. 'It is not unreasonable for the market to conclude that if the President is constrained on using trade policy, taxing foreign capital could be a new means of leverage,' he added. Even House Ways and Means Committee Chair Jason Smith, who supports the revenge tax, said during a panel discussion on Friday that he hopes it's never used and instead acts like more of a deterrent that stops other countries from cracking down on U.S. companies unfairly. Meanwhile, the Joint Committee on Taxation, the nonpartisan tax scorekeeper for Congress, echoed some of Wall Street's fears. Thomas Barthold, the committee's chief of staff, said in a statement to Bloomberg Tax that Section 899 would lead to a 'decline in foreign demand for US direct and portfolio investment.' This story was originally featured on


Politico
an hour ago
- Politico
Tim Walz tells Harris' home-state Dems that 2024 was a ‘primal scream'
ANAHEIM, California — Tim Walz on Saturday delivered blunt advice to fellow Democrats in an address to party activists and officials: 'We've got to find some goddamn guts to fight for working people.' Speaking in former Vice President Kamala Harris' home state, the Minnesota governor told California Democratic Party convention-goers that his and Harris' loss last fall was a clear sign that their party's grasp on working-class voters had slipped. It was the latest in a string of critiques he has issued while traveling the country since November. 'The party of the working class lost a big chunk of the working class,' Walz said. 'That last election was a primal scream on so many fronts.' Of Republican control, he acknowledged: 'Some of it is our own doing.' Walz's tough talk, and an energetic address from New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker earlier in the day, offered each Democrat a chance to court party insiders in the nation's largest blue bastion ahead of a possible presidential run. Walz also made an appearance in South Carolina on Saturday, an early primary state, where he acknowledged mistakes in his fall campaign at a Democratic Party convention. Maryland Gov. Wes Moore spoke Friday at a dinner in South Carolina in a preview of the 2028 presidential primary. Not all Democratic leaders have accepted there needs to be a reckoning after President Donald Trump made inroads with labor. But Trump's success was laid bare when several national unions declined last year to endorse Harris after backing Joe Biden the cycle before. He touted his successes in Minnesota — a signature child tax credit, free school meals and labor union protections — as a roadmap for the party to move forward. In another appeal to labor, he called union members in attendance the 'real VIPs.' Hundreds of attendees watched his half-hour speech, and many of them stood throughout. As he shuffled into the venue, passersby greeted him as 'Coach,' a folksy title he embraced on the trail last year that referenced his past role on a high school football team. He drew loud cheers with a shoutout to Rep. Nancy Pelosi, but the crowd was more muted when Walz expressed gratitude to Harris, saying, 'America is far better off because of her grace, courage and patriotic leadership.' Harris, who is weighing a 2026 bid for governor, did not come to the convention. She spoke only in a pre-recorded video address in which she ripped the Trump administration's tariffs and Congress' votes to cut Medi-Cal funding. She offered no indication of whether she'll run for governor next year or president, again, in 2028. And she did not look back at her bruising defeat last fall. 'What we have seen out of Washington these past few months is the swift implementation of an agenda,' Harris said, 'that dismantles our progress to tackle the climate crisis and stands in the way of our state's leadership on these issues, an agenda that threatens our world class university system.' Hours earlier, Booker told the party faithful that 'we are in a spiritual storm' and leaned into his Christian faith, as he did during his presidential run in 2020 and many times thereafter. He used his remarks to slam 'hypocrites' on the right who, he said, profess to be religious but are less righteous than many atheists he has met. 'I don't understand' people in Congress, he said, 'who say they're Christian evangelicals, but they're the first people to cut food programs for the poor, health care for the sick.' Booker drew some of the most thunderous applause of the weekend at a convention in which many of California's own congressional delegates, including Sen. Adam Schiff and battleground Rep. Derek Tran, spoke. The audience roared especially loudly after Booker quipped about missing the Obama years — and former First Lady Michelle Obama in particular. 'I miss Obama, and I miss her husband too,' Booker said.