| Maybe Trump isn’t so bad? Per The Washington Post, Donald Trump plans “to repeal parts of the 1974 law that restricts the president’s authority to spend federal dollars without congressional approval” if he’s elected to office a second time. He’s claimed his Day 1 in office would include him telling every agency to find a “large chunk” of their budgets that can be cut, taking aim at international aid programs and environmental agencies in particular.
“What the Trump team is saying is alarming, unusual and really beyond the pale of anything we’ve seen,” Eloise Pasachoff, a budget law expert at Georgetown, tells The Washington Post. But the national debt—which currently exceeds $34 trillion—is also alarming, unusual, and really beyond the pale of anything we’ve ever seen, so it’s not clear what types of drastic measures ought to be taken to return spending to appropriate levels. For more on the national debt, check out this Just Asking Questions interview with Rep. Thomas Massie (R–Ky.), who wears a debt clock lapel pin.
But the specific mechanism Trump plans to use may throw the balance between the legislative and executive branches out of whack. “I will use the president’s long-recognized Impoundment Power to squeeze the bloated federal bureaucracy for massive savings,” writes Trump on his campaign website. Impounding funds, which was banned by lawmakers when President Richard Nixon abused the process, is when a president refuses to dispense funds even after Congress has already appropriated them.
Many quoted by The Washington Post seem to believe this would be a massive constitutional crisis, and there’s plenty of reason to be skeptical that Trump would actually cut the amount of spending he says. But it’s interesting that Trump gets dinged for proposals like this one, while plenty of Joe Biden’s spendiest programs (like student loan forgiveness, which has repeatedly been thwarted by the courts) are deemed totally acceptable. |