Republican lawmakers who backed Trump’s tax cuts now freak out over bipartisan spending deal

The bipartisan congressional leadership and White House reached a two-year budget deal on Monday, seemingly averting another government shutdown and preventing a default on the national debt that has grown to an all-time high under President Donald Trump.

But despite previously backing the 2017 tax cuts for the rich that have helped fuel the largest monthly budget deficits in American history, several self-styled deficit hawks in Congress are now signaling their opposition based on claims of fiscal conservationism.

The deal — which Trump praised on Twitter as “a real compromise in order to give another big victory to our Great Military and Vets!” — will provide more than $1.3 trillion for agency spending for each of the next two years and suspend the nation’s debt limit until after the election. This will prevent the government from defaulting on its debt payments for the first time in history and avert some of the spending cuts agreed to in the 2011 Budget Control Act.

View the complete July 23 article by Josh Israel on the ThinkProgress website here.

Trump faces new hit on deficit

The Hill logoPresident Trump’s record on the deficit is poised to take another hit.

Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin are preparing a spending deal that could add as much as $2 trillion to the national debt over a decade.

Trump has sought to avoid signing additional expensive spending bills ahead of his reelection bid next year, and his team had put forward proposals to reduce domestic spending.

View the complete July 19 article by Niv Elis on The Hill website here.