White House sends Congress request for $9.4 billion in DOGE cuts
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On Tuesday, the White House submitted a proposal to Congress to retract $9.4 billion in funds allocated for foreign aid and public broadcasting, marking the initial set of reductions championed by the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE).

This move has been eagerly anticipated by many conservative activists, even as Republican members of both the House and Senate continue to advance President Trump’s tax reduction and spending initiatives under the “One Big Beautiful Bill.”

The package requires only a simple majority to pass in both legislative chambers, allowing Republicans to sidestep the possibility of a Democratic filibuster in the Senate. Congress has a 45-day window to decide on the rescission request after submission, but must manage this within the context of other significant priorities such as the “big, beautiful bill.”

The House is aiming to vote on the package next week.

“Today, we have officially received the rescissions request from the White House to eliminate $9.4 billion in wasteful foreign aid spending at State and USAID and the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, which funds NPR and PBS,” Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) said. “The House will act quickly on this request.”

Communication from President Trump officially making the request to rescind the funds was read on the House floor Tuesday afternoon.

“I herewith report 22 recissions of budget authority totaling $9.4 billion The proposed recissions affect programs of the Department of State, as well as the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, United States Agency for International Development, the United States Institute of Peace, and other international assistance programs,” the message from Trump said.

The measure’s text has not yet been publicly released, but it is expected to rescind $8.3 billion in foreign aid, largely from funding that was approved for the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), which was largely dismantled as part of the DOGE efforts earlier this year. 

An OMB spokesperson pointed to millions of dollars in those accounts that funded global LGBTQ programs and other gender equity programs, as well as global climate change and green energy initiatives.

It is also expected to cut almost $9 million from the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) — with and OMB spokesperson pointing to how it funded “$3 million for circumcision, vasectomies, and condoms in Zambia” and “$5.1 million to strengthen the ‘resilience of lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans gender, intersex, and queer global movements.’” It also rescinds $22 million from the African Development Foundation.

Republicans are heavily messaging on the package’s $1.1 billion in recissions to the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, which provides funding for NPR and PBS — two outlets that Republicans have decried as biased.

Both outlets have sued over Trump orders targeting their funding.

The cuts would amount to only a fraction of the estimated $175 billion in “savings” DOGE’s website says it has racked up through a combination of efforts, including workforce reductions, grants and contract cancellations, as well as regulatory savings and asset sales. 

However, top Democrats on the House and Senate appropriations committees have accused the Trump administration of illegally freezing $425 billion in federal funding as of Tuesday as it has undertaken a sweeping operation to shrink the size of the federal government.

Conservatives in both chambers have been confident that the GOP-led Congress will be able to push through the proposed cuts. Some are hopeful the package will be the first of multiple from the White House in the months ahead, particularly as the Trump administration’s downsizing efforts face roadblocks in court.

However, some senators have already signaled changes are likely to the request. Other Republicans have also expressed concerns about how funding cuts would impact television stations back home and about the impact of cutting PEPFAR funding.

The Impoundment Control Act provides the president with a legal pathway to cancel congressionally-approved funds. The 1974 law allows the president to temporarily withhold funding after the administration sends its request to Congress. But if Congress fails to greenlight Trump’s proposed rescissions, the administration must release the funding. 

Trump has been the only president to send the special message to Congress in the past two decades. He also attempted to pull back funds during his first term using the same process but was unsuccessful, despite Republicans controlling the House, Senate and White House at the time.

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