Back in February, with great effort, Congress passed a budget agreement, but the details and actual appropriations were not worked out.ย That required an โomnibus spending bill.โย ย After helping to negotiate the bill, then threatening to veto it, Trump finallyย signed the $1.3 trillion spending bill that blows up his own budget proposals, expands Obama-era programs, and gives a half billion dollars to Planned Parenthood.
Democrats are declaring victory.ย And rightly so.ย From Michael Grunwald in Politico:
President Donald Trumpโs budget proposals have taken a hatchet to President Barack Obamaโs top priorities. Theyโve called for deep cuts in renewable energy, medical research and nonmilitary spending in general. Theyโve eliminated TIGER, a grant program for innovative transportation projects created by Obamaโs stimulus bill; ARPA-E, an energy research agency launched by the stimulus; and CDBG, a community development program many Republicans consider an urban slush fund.
Now the Republicans who control Congress have passed a $1.3 trillion omnibus spending bill, and it not only protects Obamaโs priorities, it expands them. It does far less for Trumpโs stated priorities, and while his administration endorsed the bill Thursday, he tweeted a veto threat and expressed some apparent buyerโs remorse Friday after it passed.
The omnibusโCapitol Hill jargon for a single spending bill that funds most government functionsโdoes not kill any of the programs or agencies Trumpโs budget proposed to kill; it triples funding for TIGER, nearly doubles CDBG, and boosts ARPA-Eโs budget by 16 percent. Trump wanted to slash the Energy Departmentโs renewables budget 65 percent; instead, Congress boosted it 14 percent. Trump proposed to keep nonmilitary spending $54 billion below the congressional budget cap; the omnibus spends right up to the cap, a $63 billion increase from last year.
And despite continual promises from Republican lawmakers to defund Planned Parenthood, this new spending bill will give the organization $500 million.
President Trump complained about the bill, even as he was signing it.ย But he did so, he said, because it increased funding for the military.ย Indeed, it did.ย It gave more money to the military than President Trump requested!ย Then again, Trump requested $25 billion for the border wall, but the bill only gave him $1.5 billion.
The government would have shut down if the funding bill hadnโt passed.ย We will have another such deadline in September.ย (Canโt Congress reform its rules and procedures so as to prevent those recurrent deadlines, which only work to create pressure to pass expensive bills that lawmakers donโt have time to read?)
Go here for a summary of what is in the bill.ย The 2,232 page law also forbids stopping any government program or agency without specific congressional authorization.ย The federal deficit, needless to say, will soar.
Again, despite holding the House, the Senate, and the Presidency, Republicans are unable to turn their priorities into law.ย Instead, they fund the Democratsโ priorities.ย Normally, having such ineffective lawmakers would call for replacing them.ย But the prospects for running alternative Republican candidates against all of the incumbents is bleak.ย Disenchantment with the Republicans in Congress will likely help the Democrats be even bigger winners in the midterm elections coming up in November.ย If Democrats take over the House, the Senate, or both, conservatives would consider that to be a disaster.ย Then again, maybe not much would change.
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Photo:ย President Trumpโs Remarks Prior to Signing the Omnibus Spending Bill, March 23, 2018, Official White House photo by D. Myles Cullen, Public Domain










