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DOGE cuts are now a Trump loyalty test
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本文聚焦美国前总统特朗普对削减公共广播公司(PBS和NPR)资金的政治立场,以及由此引发的争议。特朗普明确表示,不支持削减开支的共和党人将失去他的支持。文章探讨了这项削减计划对两党合作和政府拨款流程的潜在影响,包括可能破坏两党合作的政府拨款谈判。同时,文章也提到了民主党方面的反对声音,以及共和党内部对削减开支的不同看法。最终,文章强调了在9月30日前达成政府拨款协议的重要性,否则可能导致政府停摆。

📢特朗普将削减公共广播公司资金的行为,变成了对共和党人的政治考验。他明确表示,不支持该计划的共和党人将失去他的支持。

💰该削减计划包括削减公共广播公司11亿美元的资金和削减83亿美元的对外援助。该计划已在众议院以党派立场获得通过,但在参议院面临质疑。

🤝民主党方面认为,共和党在削减公共广播公司资金的同时,希望两党在政府拨款问题上像往常一样合作,这是不合理的。他们认为,这种做法破坏了政府拨款的合作流程。

⚠️如果国会议员未能在9月30日前就下一财年的政府拨款达成一致,美国政府将面临停摆的风险。

Trump declared this week that anyone who doesn't support the DOGE cuts package "will not have my support or Endorsement."

The push to get DOGE cuts passed through Congress is only becoming more dramatic.

Senators still have questions about the $9.4 billion in cuts to foreign aid and public broadcasting funding. Some are warning that passing the cuts, known as a "rescission," could upend bipartisan government funding negotiations.

And now, President Donald Trump is turning the cuts, at least those that would affect PBS and NPR, into a political litmus test.

"It is very important that all Republicans adhere to my Recissions Bill and, in particular, DEFUND THE CORPORATION FOR PUBLIC BROADCASTING (PBS and NPR)," Trump wrote on Truth Social on Thursday night. "Any Republican that votes to allow this monstrosity to continue broadcasting will not have my support or Endorsement."

The package, which includes $1.1 billion in cuts for public broadcasting and $8.3 billion in foreign aid cuts, narrowly passed the House in June on a party-line vote.

But multiple GOP senators have expressed concerns about the rescissions, which will impact HIV/AIDS prevention programs and could affect rural public radio stations.

Senators may seek to amend the package when it comes up for a vote next week. A White House official, granted anonymity to discuss sensitive matters, told BI that the administration wants senators to pass the rescission package in its current form.

If the package is amended before passing the Senate, then it would need to pass the House again.

And if no bill is approved by the end of the day on July 18, the administration will be required by law to spend all of that money.

'Absurd for them to expect Democrats to act as business as usual'

In addition to pressure from Trump, GOP senators will have to weigh an ultimatum from Senate Democrats.

In a letter to colleagues this week, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer argued that making the DOGE cuts on a party-line basis undermines efforts to fund the government for the next fiscal year.

Because of the Senate's filibuster rule, it takes 60 votes to clear most bills through the upper chamber. That means that government funding bills are typically negotiated with significant input from both parties, with the minority often able to secure priorities that the majority party otherwise wouldn't support to ensure passage.

But rescissions only take 51 votes, and the administration has said that this could be the first of several. That raises the possibility that Republicans could move to unilaterally defund Democratic priorities after government funding bills are passed in the future.

"It is absurd for them to expect Democrats to act as business as usual and engage in a bipartisan appropriations process to fund the government, while they concurrently plot to pass a purely partisan rescissions bill to defund those same programs negotiated on a bipartisan basis behind the scenes," Schumer said in the letter.

If lawmakers can't agree on how to fund the government in the coming fiscal year by September 30, a government shutdown would take place.

Some Republican senators have acknowledged the validity of Democratic senators' argument.

"If we get to the point where the Democrats look at this and say, 'We can put it in the bill, but they're not going to fund it, or they're not going to use it,' then there's no reason for them to work with us to get to 60 votes," Sen. Mike Rounds of South Dakota told BI last month.

However, not every Republican is worried about the integrity of the current appropriations process, particularly those who remain concerned about high government spending.

"The appropriations process should be undermined," Sen. Ron Johnson of Wisconsin told BI, saying the current process is "bankrupting" the country. "That needs to be busted up."

Read the original article on Business Insider

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特朗普 公共广播 资金削减 政治
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