Elon Musk's budget-slashing hits political reality of suffering Americans
Nearly everyone agrees that the federal government has become this bloated monster that needs to be cut down to size.
The massive bureaucracy, attacked by some as evil, is absurdly overstaffed and wastes massive amounts of money.
What President Trump is doing in trying to shrink the size of government is popular – even if his billionaire budget-slasher, Elon Musk, is not – and many of the court battles are likely to be resolved in his favor.
But the equation is turned on its head when actual people feel the impact. And the media start highlighting sad cases of devastated folks. And Republican lawmakers start objecting to the cutbacks that hit home.
What Has Doge Cut So Far?
That's why it's so hard to cut the federal budget. It's not like going into SpaceX and firing a bunch of software engineers. The political pressures can be intense.
Read On The Fox News App
Virtually every program in the federal budget is there because some group, at some time, convinced Congress it was a good idea. There are noble-sounding causes – cancer research, aid to veterans, subsidies for farmers.
In fact, farmers are threatened by the near-abolition of USAID – while most people hate foreign aid, food programs provide a crucial market for American farmers, many of whom are now stuck with spoiling surpluses or loans they can't repay.
Now there's plenty of game-playing that goes on with government programs. Let's say, for the sake of argument, that agencies could cut one of every 10 employees without damaging their core functions.
Anyone who's looked at the endless cycle of conferences, conventions, training confabs, office renovations and the like knows how much fat there is in these budgets. When you throw in lucrative payments to well-connected contractors, that figure skyrockets.
But when agency officials come under fire, they immediately insist that any cutbacks will instantly hurt the poor and downtrodden, or working-class folks living paycheck to paycheck. It used to be called the Washington Monument defense, the notion that any attempt to reduce funding for the Interior Department would cause the memorial's immediate shutdown.
Doge Says It Found Nearly Untraceable Budget Line Item Responsible For $4.7T In Payments
NIH, for instance, does world-class research that benefits the country. But the battle between Musk's DOGE and the institute centers on how much is spent on indirect costs.
Musk says his aim is "dropping the overhead charged on NIH grants from the outrageous 60 percent to a far more reasonable 15 percent."
But an NBC story is headlined: "NIH Cuts Could Stall Medical Progress for Lifesaving Treatments, Experts Say."
The piece quotes Theodore Iwashyna, a physician at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, as saying his "father had pancreatic cancer, and the care plan developed for him existed only because of research funded through organizations like the NIH."
Iwashyna says the overhead is needed for "computers, whiteboards, microscopes, electricity, and janitors and staff who keep labs clean and organized."
Alabama Sen. Katie Britt, whose state is getting $518 million in NIH grants, mainly to the University of Alabama at Birmingham, is raising objections. The conservative Republican told a reporter she wants the administration to take a "smart, targeted approach" so as not to endanger "groundbreaking, lifesaving research."
Doge Needs To 'Cut Deeper' And Must 'Keep Slashing' To Succeed, Says Kevin O'leary
The examples are legion. Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski has asked the administration not to restrict funding for diversity programs among American Indian tribes.
As the New York Times puts it, "some Republicans" have sought "carve outs and special consideration for agriculture programs, scientific research and more, even as they cheered on Mr. Trump's overall approach."
Musk's DOGE team seems to be using a meat-ax method. Why lay off hundreds of FAA technicians and engineers just weeks after the fatal plane crash at Reagan National Airport, when there's already a major shortage of air traffic controllers?
FEMA, which is already stretched thin after the Los Angeles wildfires and the Kentucky flooding, is preparing to fire hundreds of probationary workers, reports the Washington Post. Such workers, who have been with the government for one or two years, basically have no rights.
But there has been zero effort to assess them. Some were told their performance was the issue, but showed the Post their evaluations. "Above fully successful," said one, for a fired GSA worker. "An outstanding year, consistently exceeding expectations," said the review for a fired NIH staffer.
But viewed from a different angle, the hometown paper and other outlets buy into the notion that federal employees should have tenure for life. Everyone in Washington knows that before Trump it was virtually impossible to fire such employees, even for cause.
Subscribe To Howie's Media Buzzmeter Podcast, A Riff On The Day's Hottest Stories
By contrast, Southwest Airlines just announced a 15% cut of its corporate workforce. No one is rushing to interview those laid off, because this sort of downsizing is routine in the private sector. But the Beltway ethos is that federal workers are entitled to their jobs.
Now intellectual honesty requires the observation that even radical cuts to the federal payroll won't have much impact on the $840 billion budget deficit or the $36 trillion federal debt. The bulk of the budget consists of Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, defense spending and interest on the debt.
Can Elon Musk and DOGE at least make progress on rooting out waste, fraud and abuse? Maybe. But the level of pain being inflicted on ordinary Americans, including in red states, and the natural tendency of politicians to shield local residents from that pain, and the media's relentless spotlight on those suffering, are going to be a giant obstacle.Original article source: Elon Musk's budget-slashing hits political reality of suffering Americans
Hashtags

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


UPI
8 minutes ago
- UPI
Senators propose $15-per-hour federal minimum wage
A proposed federal act would raise the federal minimum wage law to $15 an hour on January 1, two U.S. senators announced on Tuesday. The Service Employee International Union was fighting for that wage in 2021 (pictured). File Photo by Tasos Katopodis/UPI | License Photo June 10 (UPI) -- The federal minimum wage would rise to $15 per hour, with annual cost-of-living increases based on inflation, in a proposed bipartisan measure. Sens. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., and Peter Welch, D-Vt., co-sponsored the bill that they have named the "Higher Wages for American Workers Act" and would increase the federal minimum wage from its current $7.25 per hour for non-exempt workers. "For decades, working Americans have seen their wages flatline," Hawley said on Tuesday in a joint press release with Welch. "One major culprit of this is the failure of the federal minimum wage to keep up with the economic reality facing hardworking Americans every day," Hawley added. Welch said inflation and rising costs are making it too hard for families to afford basic necessities. "We're in the midst of a severe affordability crisis, with families in red and blue states alike struggling to afford necessities like housing and groceries," Welch said. "A stagnant federal minimum wage only adds fuel to the fire," he continued. "Every hardworking American deserves a living wage that helps put a roof over their head and food on the table -- $7.25 an hour doesn't even come close." "Times have changed, and working families deserve a wage that reflects today's financial reality," Welch added. Hawley said the current federal minimum wage is less than what a worker earned in 1940 when adjusted for inflation. If the proposed federal minimum wage increase is passed into law, it would take effect on Jan. 1 and allow cost-of-living increases that match inflation in subsequent years. Many states have respective minimum wage laws that exceed the current and proposed federal minimum wage, but a dozen still were at the federal minimum wage in 2024. Many large employers also have higher minimum wages, including Walmart, which has paid its workers at least $14 an hour and often more since 2023. President Joe Biden in 2021 ordered the federal government to pay contract workers at least $15 an hour. California lawmakers in 2022 raised the state's minimum wage for many fast-food workers to up to $22 an hour.
Yahoo
8 minutes ago
- Yahoo
New IBO Survey Reveals Major Cuts to Lab Budgets Amid NIH Grant Terminations
ARLINGTON, Va., June 10, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- A new survey conducted by Instrument Business Outlook (IBO) has uncovered significant reductions in laboratory budgets across the U.S. academic and government research landscape, with lab product spending sharply impacted by recent NIH grant terminations. The findings, based on an exclusive IBO survey, shed light on the growing financial uncertainty facing scientific research labs in 2025. The results follow widespread disruptions in NIH funding, with more than 1,500 grants totaling $7.5 billion terminated as of May 20, according to data from Grant Watch. While the exact numbers remain fluid due to inconsistent reporting by federal agencies, the toll is undeniable: R01 research grants—a cornerstone of basic research—have been particularly hard-hit, with 322 grants worth nearly $790 million terminated. "The fallout from NIH funding changes is cascading through the research ecosystem," said Tanya Samazan, Editor-In-Chief. "Our survey shows just how deeply this uncertainty is affecting labs—from basic research to clinical trial infrastructure." Survey Highlights: Budget Cuts Across the Board Conducted by the Science Advisory Board (SAB) between mid- and late May, the survey collected 117 responses from U.S.-based labs, with 88 indicating their labs were impacted by NIH-related funding disruptions. Key findings include: 59% of labs report direct impacts from NIH-related grant or contract terminations, delays, or reductions. 47% report indirect impacts. Among affected labs, nearly 60% have reduced 2025 operating budgets by more than 10%. 51% report capital budget reductions exceeding 10%. When excluding labs that were uncertain or unaffected, the scale becomes even more dramatic: 71% of labs report operating budget cuts of over 10%. 71% report similar reductions in capital budgets. Lab Tools and Consumables Hit Hardest Every category of lab spending has been affected, according to survey data: 80% of labs have reduced their 2025 consumables budgets, making it the most impacted category. 63% have cut software/informatics budgets. 70% have reduced spending on devices under $50,000. Even high-end instrumentation (>$150,000) hasn't been spared, with 62% of labs trimming these budgets. Institutes Most Affected The survey findings align with NIH grant termination data indicating the hardest-hit institutions include: National Institute of Mental Health, with over $400 million in losses. National Institute of General Medical Sciences, which lost the highest number of grants (134). Institutes heavily reliant on lab instruments, including the National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering and the National Human Genome Research Institute. Medical schools and hospitals have borne a significant share of the burden, accounting for 50% of terminated grants and 55% of total terminated NIH dollars. A Shifting Landscape with No Clear Path Forward The rapidly evolving nature of NIH decisions—including ongoing terminations and reinstatements—has created a volatile funding environment. Labs are being forced to make difficult decisions with limited visibility into future funding. About Instrument Business Outlook (IBO)IBO is a leading newsletter providing market intelligence for the analytical instrument industry. Published by Strategic Directions International (SDi), a division of Science and Medicine Group, IBO offers in-depth coverage of technology, business, and market trends affecting the life sciences and lab tools sectors. View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE Instrument Business Outlook Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data
Yahoo
8 minutes ago
- Yahoo
U.S. Conference of Mayors Statement on the Situation in Los Angeles
WASHINGTON, June 10, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Today, U.S. Conference of Mayors President Columbus (OH) Mayor Andrew Ginther released the following statement on the situation in Los Angeles, California. "The streets of American cities are no place for the U.S. military. Law enforcement is a local responsibility, and America's mayors support Mayor Bass as she works with state authorities to promote order in her city. Protest, carried out peacefully, is a bedrock of our democracy. However, violence, theft, and destruction of property can never be tolerated. We have every confidence that Mayor Bass and state officials can manage the situation. The authorities there have the experience, training and resources to maintain peace and protect the rights of legitimate protestors. "With crime plummeting across the country, mayors have demonstrated their ability to promote public safety. Troops should never be deployed to cities without the request of state and local authorities. The U.S. Conference of Mayors stands firmly behind the rights of mayors to determine the best public safety strategies for their individual cities. We urge the president to work constructively with local and state authorities as we all strive to make our cities and the nation stronger." About the United States Conference of Mayors – The U.S. Conference of Mayors is the official nonpartisan organization of cities with populations of 30,000 or more. There are more than 1,400 such cities in the country today, and each city is represented in the Conference by its chief elected official, the mayor. Follow our work on X, Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, Threads, and Medium. View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE U.S. Conference of Mayors