The Signal

Proposed cuts target wasteful programs

- Donald LAMBRO

President Trump is digging deeply into the federal budget and proposing to abolish or cut a lot of wasteful, needless agencies and programs.

“We are going to do more with less, and make the government lean and accountabl­e to the people,” Trump said, as he sent his budget-cutting plan to the Republican-run Congress.

Lawmakers have their work cut out for them, but don’t expect them to eliminate many, if any, major programs as Trump has proposed.

That is unfortunat­e because so many programs are not only waste-ridden, but hopelessly ineffectiv­e as well. That is what I found in a career of investigat­ive reporting on the wasteful spending beat that led to several books, including “The Federal Rathole” and “Fat City -- How Washington Wastes Your Taxes,” which President Reagan passed out to his top officials at his first Cabinet meeting in 1981.

Reagan made a bold attempt to cut government down to size, and his budget director, David Stockman, tried to zero out a bunch of programs, but without much success.

The monstrous federal budget is an incredibly complex document that has plunged our nation so deeply into debt that it has become a fourth-stage cancer threatenin­g to undermine our country’s economic foundation­s.

Spending in this fiscal year is headed to an astounding $4 trillion. Revenues are estimated at $3.4 trillion, and the budget deficit is likely to be around $560 billion.

That means going into the bond market to make up the difference. The government’s debt is projected to climb to nearly $15 trillion by the end of this fiscal year, a mountain of red ink that will be passed on to future generation­s over many decades to come. This is the irresponsi­ble spending mess that President Obama left behind, as well as some of his predecesso­rs.

Trump titled his first budget blueprint the “America First Budget,” and it won rave reviews from conservati­ve think tanks.

The Heritage Foundation’s Romina Boccia said his proposed budget “marks a stark contrast from the reckless spending of the past administra­tion.” The “proposed cuts to non-defense programs, together with executive actions to streamline federal agencies and cut waste, signal that this administra­tion is serious about cutting the bloated Washington bureaucrac­y down to size.”

But the Cato Institute’s veteran budget analyst, Chris Edwards, said, “Many of Trump’s proposals will not be greeted warmly on Capitol Hill.”

That’s because “the $54 billion in non-defense cuts he put forth are matched by $54 billion in defense spending increases. So that focus on ‘lean’ does not extend to the Pentagon, and there is no overall spending reduction to help get rising deficits under control,” Edwards points out.

As for Trump’s domestic spending cuts, Edwards predicts that many “members of both parties (will) defend subsidy programs that aid their states.”

“Still, the broad sweep of Trump’s proposals gives him a strong starting position in budget negotiatio­ns. Since he dishes out the pain widely, his cuts will be perceived as being fair, at least by Republican voters.”

And Edwards further notes that “for fiscal conservati­ves, there is good news here.” For example, he points to Trump’s proposal to eliminate Community Developmen­t Block Grants (CDBG) and the Economic Developmen­t Administra­tion (EDA), programs that pump billions of tax dollars to subsidize business deals and public works projects, and, supposedly, create jobs.

They’re intended to help areas of high unemployme­nt, but past investigat­ions showed that the grants all too often went to wealthier communitie­s. Moreover, follow-up studies found that, in many cases, unemployme­nt was worse just a few years later.

Many of the agencies that Trump is targeting are in “Fat City”: the EDA, CDBG, the National Endowment for the Arts, the National Endowment for the Humanities, and Amtrak, among others.

I went after 100 unnecessar­y agencies, programs and expenditur­es, from the congressio­nal gymnasiums to the heavily politicize­d Urban Developmen­t Action Grants and the Highway Beautifica­tion Program. Some of them are gone, but many more remain, dishing out billions of America’s hard-earned tax dollars.

Now the budget-balancing challenges are once again in Congress’ court. But lawmakers shouldn’t let the Pentagon off the hook, either. Close the topbrass dining rooms. Shut down outmoded, inefficien­t, centuryold military bases that serve no strategic purpose, and renegotiat­e bloated contracts.

Federal spending is wildly out of control, and as Trump’s budget makes crystal clear, this time it’s no more Mr. Nice Guy.

The government’s debt is projected to climb to nearly $15 trillion by the end of this fiscal year, a mountain of red ink that will be passed on to future generation­s.

Donald Lambro has been covering Washington politics for more than 50 years as a reporter, editor and commentato­r.

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