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				Nearly three months into a job consumed by the fight against the 
				COVID-19 pandemic, the budget proposal could shed light on the 
				Democratic president's priorities ranging from cybersecurity to 
				immigration and climate change.
 Among other measures, the document is expected to request some 
				$715 billion for the Department of Defense, roughly even in 
				inflation-adjusted terms with this year, according to a person 
				familiar with the matter. It would represent a compromise 
				between liberals trying to impose cuts and hawks who want 
				spending to increase.
 
 The administration's budget office declined to comment.
 
 The White House has been delayed in producing the document, 
				blaming resistance from political officials during the handover 
				from Trump and denying that competing interests over issues like 
				military funding played a role.
 
 Known as a "skinny" budget, Biden's proposal on Friday will 
				provide only cursory figures on programs and departments where 
				Congress has flexibility to decide what it wants to spend for 
				the fiscal year starting in October.
 
 That "discretionary" spending accounted for $1.6 trillion in the 
				2020 fiscal year, about a quarter of total federal spending. The 
				rest is for areas deemed mandatory including old-age, 
				disability, unemployment and medical benefits.
 
 A full budget proposal is set to be announced later this spring.
 
 Each of the proposals is just the first step in a budgeting 
				process that will ultimately be decided by the House of 
				Representatives and Senate, where Democrats hold bare 
				majorities.
 
 Biden withdrew his initial pick, Neera Tanden, to lead the 
				Office of Management and Budget after she faced difficulty 
				winning Senate approval. The office is currently run by acting 
				director Shalanda Young.
 
 (Reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt; Additional reporting by Mike 
				Stone; Editing by Peter Cooney)
 
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