Vought testifies before lawmakers on Trump’s $2.1T budget request
Office of Management and Budget Director Russ Vought met with U.S. lawmakers Wednesday to discuss the president’s $2.1 trillion budget proposal for the next fiscal year.
However, rather than meaningfully engaging with the budget and discussing how to incorporate it into the upcoming fiscal year 2027 government funding bills, members of the House Budget Committee spent the hearing either defending or lambasting the Trump administration’s performance.
Instead of questioning Vought about the $1.5 trillion in defense funding requested – a more than 42% boost from last year – most Republicans praised the proposal, with Rep. Ron Estes, R-Kan., saying it “prioritizes cutting wasteful spending and rooting out fraud.”
The proposal slashes non-defense discretionary spending by $73 billion, which includes targeted cuts to WIC, the National Institutes of Health, the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP), climate research, homelessness assistance and maintenance funds for the International Space Station.
It also calls for completely eliminating the Job Corps, Food for Peace program, electric vehicle charger subsidies, and the Community Development Block Grant program, among other things.
Vought framed both the president’s request and the Trump administration’s performance in general as fiscally disciplined and making “historic progress on righting our fiscal ship.”
“Under President [Donald] Trump’s bold leadership, every tool in the executive fiscal toolbox has been used to achieve real savings, and our administration will continue to do so,” Vought told lawmakers. “A historic paradigm shift in the budget process is occurring and is producing real results for the American public. Fiscal futility is over.”
The U.S. government added $1.2 trillion to the national debt, which currently tops $39 trillion, over the last six months alone.
Not a single Democrat supported the budget proposal, opposing the program cuts and the defense funding boost.
The Pentagon has failed eight consecutive audits and remains the only federal agency to never pass an audit, which Rep. Glenn Grothman, R-Wis., also pointed out, despite supporting the president’s request as a whole.
Vought justified the defense funding request, arguing that it “will ensure the United States continues to maintain the world’s most powerful and capable military as we grapple with an increasingly dangerous world.”
The committee hearing is the first of many that U.S. lawmakers will hold this week and the next to begin preparing the 12 appropriations bills funding the federal government in fiscal year 2026, which begins Oct. 1.
Congress still hasn’t passed the last of this fiscal year’s appropriations bills, with the Homeland Security bill lying stagnant in the Senate as the DHS shutdown approaches the 60-day mark.
Latest News Stories
Beyond the Gridiron: Warriors Celebrate Seniors and Rally for Pink-Out Night
Fusion nuclear energy one step closer under California law
Law designed to help veterans affected by nuclear testing
WATCH: Pritzker ‘absolutely, foursquare opposed’ to Chicago mayor’s head tax
Illinois quick hits: Elections board splits on Harmon fine; busiest summer at O’Hare
Congressman proposes bipartisan bill to address fentanyl
API now opposes year-round E15 sales, citing shifting, unstable environment for refiners
Trump administration asks Supreme Court to toss stay in National Guard case
GOP candidates: Illinois families struggle while Pritzker wins in Las Vegas
WATCH: Pritzker wants immigration enforcement, just not Trump’s way
Trump tells Dems to ‘stop the madness’ after three weeks of government shutdown
Trump, Putin meeting in Hungary called off