Friday, July 18, 2025

FASCIST AMERICA 2025: The Scumbag-In-Chief Demands That His GOP Members of His National Cult Attack, Defame, And Steal The Government's Funding Of NPR and PBS Because the Fascist Madman in the White House Actually Thinks the Media and Especially Journalists In General Belongs To Him

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/07/17/us/politics/senate-vote-trump-bill-pbs-npr-foreign-aid.html 

Congress Agrees to Claw Back Foreign Aid and Public Broadcast Funds

President Trump’s request to claw back $9 billion in congressionally approved spending passed despite objections from Republicans who said it abdicated the legislative branch’s power of the purse.

Listen to this article · 7:53 minutes 
 
Representative Virginia Foxx of North Carolina, center, listening as her House committee advanced the bill to claw back funds on Thursday. Credit: Haiyun Jiang/The New York Times


by Catie Edmondson
Reporting from the Capitol
July 17, 2025
New York Times



Congress approved a White House request to claw back $9 billion for foreign aid and public broadcasting, after Republicans bowed to President Trump in an unusual surrender of congressional spending power.

The House’s 216-to-213 vote early Friday morning sent the package to Mr. Trump for his signature. Two Republicans, Representatives Brian Fitzpatrick of Pennsylvania and Michael R. Turner of Ohio, opposed the measure.

The Senate approved the package in a predawn 51-to-48 vote the day before, overcoming the objections of two Republicans, Senators Susan Collins of Maine and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, who argued that their party was ceding Congress’s constitutional control over federal funding.

The bulk of the funds targeted — about $8 billion — was for foreign assistance programs. The remaining $1.1 billion was for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, which finances NPR and PBS.

The debate on the measure laid bare a simmering fight over Congress’s power of the purse. Since Mr. Trump began his second term, the White House has moved aggressively and at times unilaterally, primarily through the Department of Government Efficiency, to expand the executive branch’s control over federal spending, a power the Constitution gives to the legislative branch.

Top White House officials, led by Russell T. Vought, the budget office director, have sought to rein in the size of the federal government, including by freezing funds appropriated by Congress. It is part of a wider campaign to claim far-reaching powers over federal spending for the president.

This time, the administration went through a formal process by submitting what is known as a rescissions bill. Those measures are rare and seldom succeed, given how tightly Congress has historically guarded its power over federal spending. The last such package to be enacted was in 1999, under President Bill Clinton.

Mr. Trump wasted little time in celebrating, singling out in an all-caps social media post early Friday the cuts to “atrocious NPR and public broadcasting, where billions of dollars a year were wasted.”

“Republicans have tried doing this for 40 years, and failed….but no more,” he added. “This is big!!!”

G.O.P. leaders said the vote was a symbolic victory that underscored the Republican-held Congress’s willingness to cut federal spending they viewed as inappropriate and wasteful.

“I appreciate all the work the administration has done in identifying wasteful spending,” Senator John Thune of South Dakota, the majority leader, said in a speech ahead of the vote. “Now it’s time for the Senate to do its part to cut some of that waste out of the budget. It’s a small but important step toward fiscal sanity that we all should be able to agree is long overdue.”

A man in a dark suit walks in a hallway. A woman walks near him, holding a phone.
Senator John Thune on Wednesday. Credit:  Haiyun Jiang/The New York Times

But the process left even some Republicans who ultimately voted for the bill uncomfortable. A number of senators said the administration had not provided details about what specific programs would be affected.

“If we find out that some of these programs that we’ve communicated should be out of bounds — that advisers to the president decide they are going to cut anyway,” Senator Thom Tillis of North Carolina, who is retiring, said, “then there will be a reckoning for that.”

And even as G.O.P. senators agreed to cancel funding at the White House’s request, 10 of them signed a rare public letter to Mr. Vought demanding that he reverse a decision to withhold roughly $7 billion in congressionally approved funding to their states meant to bolster educational programs including after-school and summer programs.

“The decision to withhold this funding is contrary to President Trump’s goal of returning K-12 education to the states,” the Republicans wrote.

To win the votes of Republican senators who initially objected, G.O.P. leaders agreed to strip out a $400 million cut that Mr. Trump requested to the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, known as PEPFAR. The White House signaled it would not contest the change.

They also shielded some funding for some specific programs, including aid to Jordan and Egypt; Food for Peace, a program that provides food assistance to other countries; and some global health programs.

Another holdout, Senator Mike Rounds of South Dakota, who had previously indicated that he would oppose the request because of the cuts to public broadcasting, decided to support the package. He said he had been assured by top Trump administration officials that they would steer unspent funds “to continue grants to tribal radio stations without interruption” for next year.

Ahead of the vote, the head of a network of Native radio and television stations privately appealed to Mr. Rounds to oppose the package, saying the deal he had made was unworkable.

“There is currently no clear path for redirecting these funds to tribal broadcasters without significant legislative and administrative changes,” Loris Taylor, the president of Native Public Media, wrote.

The vote incensed Democrats, who argued that Republicans were ceding Congress’s constitutional powers in the name of cutting a minuscule amount of spending, just weeks after passing their marquee tax bill that would add $4 trillion to federal deficits.

They warned that it could have dire consequences for future bipartisan negotiations to fund the government. Lawmakers are currently working to negotiate spending levels ahead of a Sept. 30 shutdown deadline.

“We have never, never before seen bipartisan investments slashed through a partisan rescissions package,” Senator Patty Murray of Washington, the top Democrat on the Appropriations Committee, said. “Do not start now. Not when we are working, at this very moment, in a bipartisan way to pass our spending bills. Bipartisanship doesn’t end with any one line being crossed; it erodes. It breaks down bit by bit, until one day there is nothing left.”

The vote codified a number of executive actions the administration advanced earlier this year to gut foreign aid programs, many first undertaken by DOGE.

The effects on public media are yet to come, but the passage of the bill caused immediate alarm. Katherine Maher, the chief executive of NPR, said in a statement early Friday that the cuts represented “an unwarranted dismantling of beloved local civic institutions, and an act of Congress that disregards the public will.”

NPR and PBS will survive — only a small percentage of their funding comes from the federal government. But the cuts will force many local stations to sharply reduce their programming and operations as early as this fall. Many public broadcasters receive more than 50 percent of their budgets from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.

That means the package could be a death sentence for some stations, which have survived several attempts to choke off funding over the decades. For other broadcasters, it will mean cutting back on local programming.

“We just don’t have a lot of fat to trim elsewhere,” Julie Overgaard, the executive director for South Dakota Public Broadcasting, said in an interview ahead of the vote.

“On the PBS side of things, I can’t just start cherry-picking which national programs I want and only pay for those,” she said. “So it really leaves me and many others with little choice but to look at the local programming that we self-generate.”

Benjamin Mullin and Michael Gold contributed reporting.

 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR: 

 

Catie Edmondson covers Congress for The Times.

A version of this article appears in print on July 18, 2025, Section A, Page 1 of the New York edition with the headline: Senate Approves Trump’s Effort To Cancel Funds. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper