• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Travel News

Travel Breaking News and Information

  • Home
  • Opinions
  • Cruise
  • Resort
  • Tours
  • Airlines
  • Destination
  • Entertainment

Highlights of President Trump’s 2021 budget plan

February 10, 2020 by www.sfchronicle.com Leave a Comment

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump’s fiscal 2021 budget plan doesn’t have many fans — among either his GOP allies or opposition Democrats — but it’s a measure of the president’s priorities as he seeks a second term.

News flash: It’s short on politically painful cuts to Medicare and Social Security, sometimes called the third rails of politics — touch them and you die — while proposing cuts to domestic programs that Trump himself has never tried to put into place.

Trump’s fiscal missive contains plenty of nuggets for budget geeks but little for Washington’s deficit scolds, who see its prescriptions for balancing the budget within 15 years as politically unbalanced and unrealistic.

A look at what’s noteworthy in the president’s budget:

RECYCLED CUTS

Trump is again taking aim at the $1.4 trillion “discretionary” portion of the $4.8 trillion federal budget, proposing $2.1 trillion in cuts over 10 years from domestic agencies, foreign aid, and overseas military operations.

But such cuts run entirely counter to Trump’s actual performance as president, in which he’s signed two budget and debt deals that reversed prior cuts to both defense and domestic programs, along with three rounds of appropriations bills.

Trump’s budget plans an immediate 5% — $37 billion — cut to non-defense programs favored by Democrats and 2% cuts to such programs each subsequent year.

PRESERVING PENTAGON GAINS

Trump’s budget preserves big gains in the Pentagon budget over the past few years, essentially freezing next year’s defense budget at current levels and allowing 2% growth each year through 2025 and freezing it after that. The $741 billion defense budget includes a 3% military pay raise, funds Trump’s space force initiative, and maintains readiness accounts.

But the budget plan also cuts back funding for overseas military operations that have been used to pad Pentagon budgets and seeks $5 billion in savings — including politically challenging cuts to about 50 Pentagon medical facilities across — to fund other defense priorities.

MEDICARE CUTS

Yes, there are cuts to Medicare. And no, they wouldn’t throw Grandma off the program or raise her premiums, despite what Democrats say.

And yes, there are cuts to Medicaid. And yes, they will affect beneficiaries.

First, on Medicare, which serves seniors, Trump’s budget cuts are aimed chiefly at health care providers like hospitals. They are howling at longstanding proposals to deny hospitals higher reimbursement rates for outpatient services than other medical facilities. The budget would also cut payments for “post-acute” care provided for people discharged from hospitals.

Critics say the cuts — $465 billion over the coming decade — are so large that health care providers will be hurt and care will suffer, but the core Medicare program would remain intact.

Medicaid, the state-federal health care program for the poor and disabled, is a different story.

Trump’s latest Medicaid proposal would allow states that want more flexibility in Medicaid to accept their federal share as a lump sum; for states staying in traditional Medicaid, a 3% cap on cost growth would apply.

SECRET SERVICE

The budget would transfer the Secret Service back to Treasury from the Department of Homeland Security, a bureaucratic victory for Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin. The proposal is aimed at improving the government’s response to high-tech financial crimes and terror financing. The Secret Service was transferred to Homeland Security after the 9/11 attacks.

TOBACCO

The budget proposes spinning off the Food and Drug Administration’s tobacco center into a separate agency. The FDA’s Center for Tobacco Products regulates traditional tobacco products and newer nicotine-based devices like electronic cigarettes.

For more than a year the FDA has struggled to reverse a surge in underage vaping driven by fruity, candy-like flavors in e-cigarettes. Last week the agency put in place new restrictions banning most flavors from small, reusable e-cigarettes like Juul, the leading brand among teenagers. But anti-tobacco advocates complain teens are already shifting to vapes not covered by the policy.

In November, senior White House official Joe Grogan complained that FDA’s oversight of tobacco and vaping was “a huge waste of time” that distracted the agency from focusing on treatments for cancer and other deadly diseases.

The budget states that spinning off the FDA’s tobacco operations would allow the agency “to focus on its traditional mission” of regulating food and drugs.

  • Why Trump's immigration plans are bad for America's elderly and disabled
  • Trump's Tax Plan: What It Means for You
  • Real Reason Behind Hillary Clinton Lambasting Trump's Budget for 'Cruelty'
  • 'Max Pressure' on N Korea: Highlights of Trump's State of the Union Address
  • Donald Trump says he plans to end 'ridiculous' birthright citizenship with an executive order because 'You walk over the border, have a baby, congratulations – the baby is now a U.S. citizen'
  • President Trump Takes Credit For Beaver County Cracker Plant Announced In 2012
  • President Trump Visits Shell Cracker Plant In Monaca
  • EU shoots down Italy's budget plans, again
  • President Trump Kicks off UK State Visit With ‘Dumb and Incompetent’ London Mayor Khan Roast
  • Ivanka Trump Praises Tax Plan That Would Save Her Family Hundreds of Millions of Dollars
  • President Trump planning to attend Alabama-LSU game this weekend
  • President Trump delves into toilet-flushing crisis
  • From Jerusalem to INF Treaty: Highlights of Trump's Foreign Policy in 2018
  • President Trump returns to Louisiana to promote energy sector; here's what he has planned
  • Trump Signs Budget Bill Into Law, Preventing US Government Shutdown
  • Five ways IoT projects can power your 2019 IT budget planning
  • The role cybersecurity should play in 2019 IT budget planning
  • Why CIOs must lead 2019 IT budget planning with digital transformation
  • HOSTILE AND DANGEROUS: President Trump Responds to North Korean Nuclear Test
  • Trump's Deportation Plan Could Shrink the U.S. Economy: Study
Highlights of President Trump's 2021 budget plan have 917 words, post on www.sfchronicle.com at February 10, 2020. This is cached page on Travel News. If you want remove this page, please contact us.

Filed Under: News Donald Trump, Democrats, RECYCLED CUTS Trump, Steven Mnuchin, Joe Grogan, Grandma, Juul, U.S., WASHINGTON, Medicare, AP, MC Complete - State & National, Steven Mnuchin GOVERNMENT_FIGURE, Social Security, GOP, Food and Drug Administration, PENTAGON, SECRET, 2021 master plan delhi, delhi 2021 master plan, where is president trump now, about president trump, poll president trump, email president trump, email to president trump, president trump approval rating, president trump cabinet, president trump impeachment, president trump schedule, president trump speech today, president trump today, president trumps wife, tweets president trump, 45th president trump, president trump pardons, president trump schedule today, tweet to president trump, president trumps cabinet

Primary Sidebar

RSS Recent Stories

  • LOCKED IN ON GOAL
  • Strengthening disaster risk management
  • PNVF announces 23-member pool, awaits schools’ official release
  • Shell, Nickel Asia tie up to develop 1 GW of renewable energy
  • Converge told: Satisfy promises, or lose tax perks
  • Arlene Muhlach on why being part of a big show biz clan both boon and bane
  • Cesar Montano on the toughest part of playing his controversial new role
  • India bans many single-use plastics to tackle waste
  • Meta slashes hiring plans, girds for ‘fierce’ headwinds
  • The rise of the 0.5 selfie

Sponsored Links

  • UK, Denmark, and Australia Report Highest Daily Covid-19 Cases
  • The best movie scenes of 2021
  • Windows 11’s Default Command Line Catches up to Mac and Linux
  • What Is the Log4j Flaw, and How Does it Affect You?
  • Commander Keen 4: The First and Only Video Game I Loved
Copyright © 2022 Travel News. Power by Wordpress.
Home - About Us - Contact Us - Disclaimers - DMCA - Privacy Policy - Submit your story