• GET OUR DAILY NEWSLETTER!
  • The Right Wing
  • Religious right
  • GO AD FREE!
  • MAKE A ONE-TIME DONATION
  • GET OUR DAILY NEWSLETTER!
  • The Right Wing
  • Religious right
  • GO AD FREE!
  • MAKE A ONE-TIME DONATION
  1. Home
  2. / Home

'Shred to the bone': These Republicans have 'serious objections' to Trump's proposed cuts

Adam Lynch
02 May

Sen. Roger Wicker (R-Miss.) on July 7, 2015 (Image: OSCE Parliamentary Assembly / Flickr / Creative Commons)

President Donald Trump is asking Congress to slash non-defense programs by more than $163 billion while keeping military funding flat. But “flat” means “cut” in GOP terms because it does not contain the $3 trillion required to fully support the military. Military-minded congressional Republicans are worried.

The White House budget proposal requests a 20 percent across-the-board cut, giving some in the GOP headaches leading up to the Sept. 30 government shutdown deadline, Politico reports.

Senate Appropriations Chair Susan Collins (R-Maine) called the proposal “late” and lacking “key details,” and voiced “serious objections to the proposed freeze in our defense funding given the security challenges we face." She also opposed major slashing to non-military programs.

Read more: 'Losing the base': MTG goes on massive rant against Trump

Senate Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky), who has been a loyal Trump ally in the past, described the president’s budget blueprint as fraught with Office of Management and Budget “accounting gimmicks” that fail to “counter the growing, coordinated challenges we face from China, Russia, Iran, North Korea and radical terrorists.”

“But they won’t fool Congress,” McConnell added.

Other pro-military Republicans like Sen. Roger Wicker (R-Miss.) the White House’s request “a cut in real terms” for the U.S. military with an “intent to shred to the bone our military capabilities and our support to service members.”

Wicker’s state of Mississippi contains shipbuilder Huntington Ingalls, which drew down $1.6 billion in Department of Defense money in 2022. Second in line is DOD contractor ST Engineering, earning $651.8 million in defense contracting in a state with an economy valued only at $157.5 billion in 2024.

READ MORE: 'Kill them all': Shocking details about Fetterman’s behavior raise concerns over his health

Aside from budget concerns, if Republicans agree with White House cuts, they risk losing Democratic support to pass a budget filibuster in Senate.

Read the full Politico story here.

From Your Site Articles
  • This Republican move threatens to kill thousands of jobs in districts that voted for Trump ›
  • 'Mistake': Some Republicans worry key proposal could cost them the midterms ›
  • Trump official worried GOP will get 'slaughtered' if they run on 'tax cuts for the rich' ›
  • 'Unfit for office?' ​​Fetterman's fitness questioned amid new reports of erratic behavior - Alternet.org ›
  • 'Bring back shame': MTG ripped for failing to read 'potentially dangerous' Trump bill - Alternet.org ›
Related Articles Around the Web
  • TRUMP'S PROJECT 2025 Hurts the Middle Class and Weakens the ... ›
  • Vulnerable Republicans worry Johnson's spending plan increases ... ›
  • Republicans worry GOP-led states will suffer from Trump's firings of ... ›

Alternet

All Rights Reserved

View Non-AMP Version