Biden set to release first detailed budget of his presidency on May 27
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[May 14, 2021]
By Trevor Hunnicutt
(Reuters) - President Joe Biden will unveil
the first detailed budget proposal of his term in office on May 27, a
spokesman said, offering a window into his priorities from defense
spending to deficit reduction.
Biden in April outlined a glimpse at plans for about $1.5 trillion in
"discretionary" spending, which represents only part of the budget.
The full budget, which covers the fiscal year starting in October, will
be the first exhaustive list of the programs Biden wants to expand or
cut - from foreign aid to immigration and policing. Rob Friedlander, a
spokesman for the Office of Management and Budget, confirmed the
late-May release date.
As the economy stumbles to recover from the coronavirus pandemic, the
budget will offer a sense of how much the government wants to rein in
deficit spending, as well as how it sees taxes and economic growth
helping its agenda.
But it's merely one step in a spending process as Biden works to muscle
through Congress some $4 trillion in spending on proposals ranging from
infrastructure to childcare. Lawmakers must sign off on any spending
Biden requests.
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President Joe Biden delivers remarks on tackling climate change
prior to signing executive actions in the State Dining Room at the
White House in Washington, U.S., January 27, 2021. REUTERS/Kevin
Lamarque/File Photo
The outline Biden released in April marked a sharp
departure from his Republican predecessor Donald Trump, spreading
billions across areas ranging from public transit, poor schools,
toxic site clean-ups, and background checks on gun sales, but
nothing on border walls.
But Biden's plans for the Department of Defense drew the most
attention. Liberals were disappointed that the roughly-even funding
on an inflation-adjusted basis at $715 billion would fail to cut
wasteful Pentagon spending. Conservatives want more spending to
counter threats from China, Russia, Iran and North Korea.
(Reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt; Editing by Nick Zieminski)
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