Page 10A NATION East Oregonian Friday, March 17, 2017 TRUMP PROPOSED BUDGET Cuts to GOP, Dem favorites alike By ANDREW TAYLOR Associated Press WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump’s new $1.15 trillion budget would reshape America’s government with the broad, conservative strokes he promised as a candidate, ordering generous increases for the military, slashing domestic programs and riling both fellow Republicans and Democrats by going after favored programs. The president’s initial budget proposal, submitted to Congress on Thursday, would boost defense spending by $54 billion, the largest increase since Ronald Reagan’s military buildup of the 1980s. That means deep cuts elsewhere — the environment, agriculture, the arts — but Trump said that’s imperative to take on the Islamic State group and others in a dangerous world. “To keep Americans safe, we have made the tough choices that have been put off for too long,” he declared in a statement titled “America First” that accompanied the budget. Or, as Budget Director Mick Mulvaney said, “This is a hard power budget, not a soft power budget.” It’s not entirely in line with Trump’s campaign pledges. It would make a big down payment on the U.S.-Mexico border wall, which Trump repeatedly promised the Mexicans would pay for. American taxpayers will, at least for now. Thursday’s proposal calls for an imme- diate $1.4 billion infusion with an additional $2.6 billion planned for the 2018 budget year starting Oct. 1. Parts of Trump’s spending plan for the next fiscal year angered both congressional Democrats and Republicans who will have the final say on it. While it targets Demo- cratic priorities like housing, community development and the environment, it also would slash GOP sacred cows like aid to rural schools and subsidized airline service to Trump strongholds, and it would raise fees on partic- ipants in the federal flood insurance program. The budget pursues frequent targets of the GOP’s staunchest conser- vatives, eliminating the National Endowment for the Arts, legal aid for the poor, low-income heating assis- tance and the AmeriCorps national service program established by President Bill Clinton. But Midwestern Repub- licans including Sen. Rob Portman of Ohio were upset by cuts to the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative. Southern Republicans like Rep. Hal Rogers of Kentucky Trump budget makes deep cuts President Donald Trump’s budget blueprint for the 2018 fiscal year boosts spending for defense, veterans and homeland security, with cuts to most other departments. DEPARTMENT/ AGENCY BUDGET (in billions) Agriculture $17.9 Commerce 7.8 Defense PERCENTAGE CHANGE FROM CURRENT SPENDING -20.7 % -15.7 574.0 10.0 Education 59.0 -13.5 Energy 28.0 -5.6 5.7 -31.4 Health and Human Svcs.* 65.1 -16.2 Homeland Security 44.1 6.8 Housing and Urban Dev. 40.7 -13.2 Interior 11.6 -11.7 Justice 27.7 -3.8 Labor 9.6 -20.7 Small Business Admin. 0.8 -5.0 State/International programs 27.1 Transportation 16.2 -28.7 EPA -12.7 Treasury** 11.2 -4.4 Veterans Affairs 78.9 5.9 Social Security* 9.3 0.2 19.1 -0.8 5.0 -16.3 NASA Corps of Engineers Other agencies 26.5 -9.8 Overseas war operations/ disaster relief 85.9 -11.2 *Does not include mandatory spending on entitlement benefits. **Does not include spending on interest on the federal debt. SOURCE: Office of Management and Budget lashed out at cuts he called “draconian, careless and counterproductive.” One target of the budget is the Appalachian Regional Commission, which helps communities in the region. Trump’s proposal covers only roughly one-fourth of the approximately $4 trillion total federal budget. This is the discretionary portion that Congress passes each year, “I just want to make sure that rural America, who was very supportive to Trump, doesn’t have to take a disproportionately high cut.” — Rep. Robert Aderhold, R-Alabama not addressing taxes, Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid. Nor does it make predictions about deficits and the economy. Those big-picture details are due in May, and are sure to show large — probably permanent — budget deficits. Trump has vowed not to cut Social Security and Medicare and is dead set against raising taxes. As for Thursday’s proposal, Republicans praised the president for beefing up the Pentagon, but they were far less enthusiastic about accepting Trump’s recipe for doing so without AP adding to the nation’s $20 trillion debt. “While we support more funding for our military and defense, we must maintain support for our farmers and ranchers,” said North Dakota Republican John Hoeven, blasting a 21 percent cut to the Agriculture Department’s budget. The proposed budget would close numerous county offices that help farmers and rural residents navigate farm subsidy and rural development programs. Rural development and water projects would also bear cuts. “I just want to make sure that rural America, who was very supportive to Trump, doesn’t have to take a dispro- portionately high cut,” said Rep. Robert Aderholt, R-Ala. Budget Director Mulvaney acknowledged that passing the cuts could be an uphill struggle and said the administration would negotiate. “This is not a take-it-or- leave-it budget,” he acknowl- edged. Many of Trump’s GOP allies on Capitol Hill gave it only grudging praise, if any. “Congress has the power of the purse,” reminded House Appropriations Committee Chairman Rodney Frelinghuysen of New Jersey. “I look forward to reviewing this,” said House Speaker Paul Ryan of Wisconsin. “Many of the reductions and eliminations proposed in the President’s ‘skinny budget’ are draconian, care- less and counterproductive,” AP Photo/Seth Wenig Air traffic controllers work in the tower at John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York, Thursday. President Donald Trump is calling for privatizing the nation’s air traffic control operations in his budget proposal, a top priority of the airline industry. Trump calls for privatizing air traffic control WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump is calling for privatizing the nation’s air traffic control operations in his budget proposal, a top priority of the airline industry. The proposal says spinning off air traffic operations from the Federal Aviation Administration and placing them under an “independent, non-gov- ernmental organization” would make the system “more efficient and inno- vative while maintaining safety.” There are about 50,000 airline and other aircraft flights a day in the United States. Both sides of the privatization debate say the system is one of the most complex and safest in the world. The FAA would continue to provide safety oversight of the system under a congressional privatization plan. Airlines have been lobbying vigorously for the change, saying the FAA’s NextGen program to modernize the air traffic said Rep. Harold Rogers, R-Ky. Law enforcement agen- cies like the FBI would be spared. In addition to the billions for the border wall, there is a request for $1.2 billion for the current budget year for additional border patrol and immigration control agents. More than 3,000 EPA workers would lose their jobs and programs such as Barack Obama’s Clean Power Plan, which would tighten regu- lations on emissions from power plants seen as contrib- uting to global warming, would be eliminated. Popular EPA grants for state and local drinking and wastewater projects would be preserved, however, even as research into climate change would be system is taking too long and has produced too few benefits. Industry officials say that privatization would remove air traffic opera- tions from the uncertainties of the annual congressional budget process, which have hindered the FAA’s ability to make long-term procure- ment commitments. “Our system is safe, but it is outdated and not as efficient as it should or could be,” said Nick Calio, president of Airlines for America. The National Air Traffic Controllers Association, the union that represents the FAA’s 14,000 controllers, backed an unsuccessful congressional attempt at privatization last year. The union said it will evaluate Trump’s plan. Union offi- cials have complained that the FAA has been unable to resolve chronic controller understaffing at some of the nation’s busiest facil- ities, and they say they’ve become discouraged by the modernization effort’s slow progress. But FAA Administrator Michael Huerta told an aviation industry confer- ence earlier this month that the agency has made “tremendous progress” over the past decade in updating its computers and other equipment in order to move from a radar- based to a satellite-based control system. The modernization program has already delivered $2.7 billion in benefits to airlines and other users of the system, and the FAA expects to produce another $13 billion in benefits by 2020, he said. Opponents say the process of transferring air traffic control operations from the FAA to a corpora- tion could take years and be disruptive. “Air traffic control privatization will not benefit the flying public and it definitely will not benefit taxpayers who will be on the hook for bailing out the private ATC corpo- ration if it fails,” said Rep. Peter DeFazio, D-Ore. eliminated. Before the two sides go to war over Trump’s 2018 plan, they need to deal with more than $1.1 trillion in unfinished agency budgets for the current year. A temporary catchall spending bill expires April 28; nego- tiations have barely started and could get hung up over Trump’s request for the wall and additional border patrol and immigration enforcement agents, just for starters. Some of the most polit- ically sensitive domestic programs would be spared in the new proposal, including food aid for pregnant women and their children, housing vouchers for the poor, aid for special education and school districts for the poor, and federal aid to historically black colleges and universi- ties. Critics seized on difficult-to-defend cuts to programs such as Meals on Wheels, which delivers food to elderly shut-ins. But the National Institutes of Health would absorb a $5.8 billion cut despite Trump’s talk in a recent address to Congress of finding “cures to the illnesses that have always plagued us.” Subsidies for airlines serving rural airports in Trump strongholds would be eliminated. The plan would also shut down some money-losing long-distance Amtrak routes and kill off a popular $500 million per-year “TIGER Grant” program for highway proj- ects created by Obama. Travel ban rulings highlight trouble posed by Trump record By GENE JOHNSON and SUDHIN THANAWALA Associated Press SEATTLE — Federal law gives the president broad authority over immigration. Jimmy Carter used it to deny some Iranians entry to the U.S. during the hostage crisis, Ronald Reagan to bar Cubans who didn’t already have relatives here and President Obama to keep out North Korean officials. So why does President Donald Trump keep running into legal trouble with his efforts to freeze immigration by refugees and citizens of some predominantly Muslim nations? When federal courts in Hawaii and Maryland blocked Trump’s revised travel ban from taking effect, the judges spelled out their major concern: the unusual record of statements by the president and his advisers suggesting the executive order’s real purpose was to discriminate against Muslims, in violation of the Constitution’s ban on officially favoring or disfa- voring any religion. As the legal fight moves into the appeals courts, two key issues will be the extent of the president’s broad immigration powers — and whether Trump’s own record AP Photo/Mark Humphrey President Donald Trump speaks at a rally Wednesday in Nashville, Tenn. stymies his plans. THE RULINGS Neither U.S. District Judge Theodore Chuang in Maryland nor Judge Derrick Watson bought the admin- istration’s reasoning that the travel ban is about national security. “The history of public statements continues to provide a convincing case that the purpose of the second executive order remains the realization of the long-envi- sioned Muslim ban,” Chuang wrote. Watson criticized what he called the “illogic” of the government’s arguments and cited “significant and unre- butted evidence of religious animus” behind the travel ban. He also noted that while courts should not examine the “veiled psyche” and “secret motives” of government deci- sion-makers, “the remarkable facts at issue here require no such impermissible inquiry.” “For instance, there is nothing ‘veiled’ about this press release: ‘Donald J. Trump is calling for a total and complete shutdown of Muslims entering the United States,’” he wrote, referring to a statement Trump issued as a candidate. But the scope of the rulings differed. In a challenge brought by Hawaii, Watson blocked the federal govern- ment from enforcing its ban on travel from six mostly Muslim countries and its suspension of the nation’s refugee program. Chuang only blocked the six-nation travel ban, saying it wasn’t clear that the suspen- sion of the refugee program was similarly motivated by religious bias. A federal judge in Seattle on Thursday ruled that his order blocking Trump’s orig- inal travel ban does not apply to the revised executive order because there are enough differences between the two. Judge James Robart noted that Washington and several other states have also asked him to block the revised ban. He said he would rule on that request at a later date. APPEALS COMING Speaking Wednesday evening at a rally in Nashville, Tennessee, Trump called the ruling in Hawaii an example of “unprecedented judicial overreach” and said his administration would appeal it to the U.S. Supreme Court. He also called his new travel ban a watered-down version of the first one, which he said he wished he could implement. “We’re going to win. We’re going to keep our citizens safe,” the president said. “The danger is clear. The law is clear. The need for my executive order is clear.” White House spokesman Sean Spicer said Thursday that the Justice Department was exploring its options, but that it expected to file an appeal of the Maryland ruling with the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals and to seek clar- ification of the Hawaii order before appealing to the 9th Circuit. That circuit is where a three-judge panel unani- mously declined to reinstate Trump’s original travel ban when it was put on hold by a Seattle Judge last month. Despite the legal victories for critics of the ban, it’s far from clear that they will continue to win. A different panel of judges in the 9th Circuit will probably hear the appeal of Hawaii’s case. And on Wednesday, five judges signed a dissent criticizing the court’s decision not to reconsider and throw out the panel’s ruling on the original travel ban. “Whatever we, as indi- viduals, may feel about the president or the executive order, the president’s decision was well within the powers of the presidency,” Judge Jay Bybee wrote for the five. TRUMP’S AUTHORITY In 1952, with the nation fearful of communist infiltra- tion, Congress gave the pres- ident the authority under the Immigration and Nationality Act to take action: “Whenever the president finds that the entry of any aliens or of any class of aliens into the United States would be detrimental to the interests of the United States, he may ... suspend the entry of all aliens or any class of aliens as immigrants or nonimmigrants, or impose on the entry of aliens any restrictions he may deem to be appropriate,” the law says. That power has been invoked dozens of times. But legal experts say those exam- ples were more limited than what Trump has sought. Citing a report that reviewed White House administrations going back to Reagan, Chuang noted in his ruling that no pres- ident has issued a ban on the entry “of all citizens from more than one country at the same time, much less six nations all at once.” Chuang found that the travel ban likely violated another aspect of federal immigration law, barring discrimination on the basis of nationality in the issuance of immigrant visas. That law was passed in 1965 as part of an effort to end longstanding immigration quotas that had been criticized as racist.