Trump shows yet again he’s not really interested in reining in government spending
For all his bluster about “government efficiency” these days, President Donald Trump has never been comfortable as a scissor-happy, cost-cutting deficit warrior.
He barreled into a Republican Party a decade ago that was dominated at the time by the debt-minded politics of Paul Ryan and the tea party movement and single-handedly shut down talk of slashing Social Security and Medicare.
This week, his aversion to austerity showed its face again — and it portends strife ahead for the GOP.
The White House walked back a budget office directive to freeze a staggering swath of federal spending within about 24 hours earlier this week. The surrender came after an uproar not only from Democrats but some fellow Republicans, and it was a tacit admission that the negative coverage about potentially halting programs like Meals on Wheels was cutting through Trump’s flood-the-zone flurry of Washington chaos — and thus becoming a major political headache.
“He does not like taking benefits away — that is not his platform,” said one senior GOP lawmaker who is close with the president.
While many conservatives cheered the spending freeze, the reality is that it was not a fight Trump intended to pick — at least not at that moment. As the New York Times and other outlets reported, the White House didn’t vet the Office of Management and Budget memo first. And the Trump insiders I spoke to were peeved that the document gave the impression that far more was on the chopping block than was actually the case.
The lessons from this week’s episode should be bracing for Republicans all over Washington. On Capitol Hill, conservatives are gunning for trillions of dollars in spending reductions — targeting programs like Medicaid and food aid that will impact everyday Americans, searching for offsets to tax cuts, border spending and other costly proposals.
Swing-district lawmakers are already complaining privately about political blowback they’ll face back home, and — after the hubbub this week — it seems more likely they’ll have an ally in Trump.
To be sure, the White House doesn’t give a fig about the argument that they’re running roughshod over Congress’ power of the purse. Far from it: They are intent on using executive power to undertake key policy goals, like rooting out diversity, equity and inclusion programs and reversing predecessor Joe Biden’s climate policies.
Billionaire ally Elon Musk is deadly serious about using his “Department of Government Efficiency” to bring ruthless Silicon Valley business practices to Washington. We learned Friday, via the Washington Post, he’s itching to get his hands on the levers of the federal payment system responsible for distributing the government’s $6 trillion in annual payments to households, businesses and the like.
But the president and his inner circle know better now than ever that there’s a fine line between going after the “deep state” and “woke” politics and crossing into areas that may affect a larger group of Americans, their own voters included.
Even before scaling back the spending freeze, the Trump administration showed a soft spot for programs that other Republicans have long targeted. During her first news conference Tuesday, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt stressed that not only would Medicare and Social Security be spared by the freeze, but food stamps and welfare programs, too. Seven times she repeated that no individual benefits would be affected.
Those comments came as I heard reservations in Trump’s orbit about offsetting the expansive domestic policy package taking shape on Capitol Hill. To pay for what could be $10 trillion in Trump policy demands, lawmakers are looking at major cuts to mandatory spending programs — and they’re frankly skeptical Trump is interested in going there.
Underlying this debate is a question of politics: Republicans are keenly aware that the 2026 midterms are around the corner and that, if history is a guide, they’ll have a hell of a time keeping their slim congressional majorities, especially in the House. Many remember how Democrats used their 2017 policy push to great advantage in 2018 — accusing the GOP of trying to rip health coverage away from everyday Americans while giving tax cuts to the wealthiest.
But there’s a fundamental disagreement among Republicans about how much they should care: I’ve spoken to many conservatives who argue that the House is basically gone in 2026 given their tiny majority. That means now is the time, these types argue, to blow through their political capital and attack the federal deficit, political blowback be damned. [Continue reading…]