The Rescission Bill Reveals How Difficult It Is To Get Congress To Make Even Tiny Spending Cuts
The bill, which could pass the Senate on Wednesday, would trim 13 cents from every $100 of federal spending.

At some point on Wednesday evening, the Senate is likely to approve a bill trimming the federal budget by about $9 billion—though the exact total could change as amendments are offered on the Senate floor.
On one hand, this is a laudable and semi-significant effort at cutting the cost of government. If the rescission bill ultimately makes it through Congress and President Donald Trump signs it, then Republicans will turn all the drama surrounding Elon Musk and the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) into a meaningful, if small, reduction in federal spending.
On the other hand, the bill should be proof that "owning the libs" is not an effective strategy for balancing the budget or imposing fiscal responsibility.
The rescission bill contains a bunch of prime cuts of red meat hand-selected by the Trump administration. Foreign aid and public broadcasting are the main things on the chopping block. It's meant to be the most palatable set of cuts for the GOP's political base—and it serves to underscore how limited that approach actually is, in the context of the massive federal budget and expanding budget deficit.
And, yes, of course, you have to start cutting somewhere. It's possible that anything more substantial than a $9 billion cut would not have made it through Congress. Indeed, until Wednesday's vote was in the books, it wasn't a sure bet that even this package would get across the finish line. Senate Republicans needed to call upon Vice President J.D. Vance to break a tie on a procedural vote yesterday after three GOP members—Sens. Susan Collins (R–Maine), Mitch McConnell (R–Ky.), and Lisa Murkowski (R–Alaska)—balked at the proposal.
The difficulty that Republicans faced in getting even just $9 billion in spending cuts to this point (where we still don't know if the bill will pass) reveals the Sisyphean task facing anyone who would like to see the federal budget brought closer to balancing. Federal spending has grown from about $5 trillion a decade ago to nearly $7 trillion this year, and trying to roll back even a fraction of that total is enough to get every Democrat and a few Republicans uneasy.
In the context of the $7 trillion federal budget, this $9 billion cut amounts to a little more than one-tenth of one percent. In other words, if the entire federal budget were a $100 bill, the rescission package would be equal to cutting 13 cents.
We're a long way from the $500 billion rescission request that Sen. Rand Paul (R–Ky.) originally sought, and even farther from the $2 trillion in cuts that the Trump administration (with help from Musk, back when he was on the inside) promised to deliver.
Still, you have to be willing to take the 13 cents when they are offered. Paul is doing the right thing by not letting the perfect be the enemy of the good. In a post on Wednesday, Paul said he was "happy to cast my vote" for the rescission package.
"It might not have cut all that I would have liked to see, but it's a start at reining in Washington's crazy spending," Paul wrote.
Other advocates for fiscal responsibility, like the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, have suggested that getting a rescission package—any rescission package—through Congress might help pave the way for more, and potentially more significant, packages in the future.
One can hope. This rescission bill isn't going to do much to solve the federal government's fiscal mess, but it does serve up a depressing reminder of how difficult it can be to get even the smallest of cuts through Congress.
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Little by little. This is the bill cutting coerced US taxpayer funding to PB$, NPR, and U$AID correct?
would trim 13 cents from every $100 of federal spending.
Not worth the effort.
What else have they got to do ?
He is mocking reasons prior coverage of 4% cuts to mandatory programs not being worth it because it didnt fix everything in one bill. Or their coverage of DOGE.
Reason doesn’t really want any cuts, except for maybe defense.
The Rescission Bill Reveals How Difficult It Is To Get Congress To Make Even Tiny Spending Cuts
Especially when you have the leading "abolish everything" publication standing athwart the process while shouting "dew process!"
This is a historic reduction in spending. When was the last time Congress cut 9 billion out of the budget? Take the win.
Especially considering what would be happening if Democrats were in charge. Instead of small cuts, there would no doubt be big increases [and illegals would still be pouring accross the border].
It seems to me the democrats are in no hurry to find support of the public by voting against the policies that the public voted for.
The idea they are only there to oppose and resist because they are not in power is ridiculous. They are supposedly there to serve the American people. The last couple of decades have brought to light the democrats and Rhino's are only there to serve themselves.
They are down to 19% approval and 60% disapproval. Keep encouraging them. They are doing great!
Democrat elites believe the public is there to serve them. And the democrat rabble agree.
Lisa Murkowski hates you. Susan Collins hates you. They all hate you.
Reason wants more ranked choice voting and more Murkowskis
Somebody has to save the uniparty and these brave women have stepped up to the plate.
This is stupid. The proper time for spending cuts is when the budget is written and passed, not after the fact.
Your comment is stupid. The proper time for cuts is when cuts are valid.
The impoundment act should be ruled unconstitutional as this process is intended to keep unneeded spending.
But you're a big gov leftist so we get it.
Get fucked, respectfully of course.
Nope, we're broke.
https://www.usdebtclock.org/
Fuck you, cut spending. The proper time for spending cuts is every fucking possible chance.
Good, now tell Massey to stop being a pussy and get on board.
Happy to see reason is finally starting to see cuts are being attempted but there are impediments to the cuts. Just wish they would stop demanding raising the income tax to hide the issues.
Left unsaid is the spending surplus and tariff revenues that are many times more.
Btw, don't forget Trump won't release the Epstein files. No matter what nonsense they spout to try to distract from that fact.
So Mr. Boehm what do you suggest be done? I have read many of your articles criticizing the Republicans fiscal policies but in none, not one, do you make any suggestions as to what should be done. Could it be that you just want to whine and criticize and nothing else?
And, yes, of course, you have to start cutting somewhere. It's possible that anything more substantial than a $9 billion cut would not have made it through Congress.
You just revealed your answer.
You want spending cuts, make them single-issue bills. One thing you're going to cut in one place, and then start the process. This has a greater chance of success and it gets the legislators on the record about what they do want and what they don't, and why.
$9 billion here and $9 billion there and pretty soon you are talking about real money.
This is why they don’t do that.
Pass a 28th amendment, "Government coercion is prohibited." and Bob's your uncle.
I didn’t even have to look at the news to know which 3 Senators joined the democrats against these cuts.
They’re scum. Democrats and RINOs need to go away forever.
Why it's almost like hoping for the miracle of a Companies Board of Directors vote for their own salary cuts. It really requires a special level of honorable to hand someone the nations Gov-Guns monopoly and expect them to use it honorably to defend Individual Liberty and ensure Justice for all instead of to turn a party (hut hum; Demonrats) into the nations largest criminal gang.
Precisely why the USA is a *Constitutional* (The Peoples law over their Government) Republic and not a Democracy. Which failed when SCOTUS allowed FDR & Democrats (New Deal) were allowed to run-crazy and start destroying the USA for their [Na]tional So[zi]alist Empire of demise.
Now, instead of $2.2 trillion, the deficit will only be $2.2 trillion.
No, it will go down. Primarily because Trump is raising revenue through programs like Golden Ticket, and the tariffs are already raising additional revenue, plus all the foreign investment he negotiated.
Which is what he has to do. Considering that democrats will reflexively oppose him no matter what, and the thin GOP congressional majorities ensure we get tepid results from them at best.
Trimming even a single dollar from the budget is worth the effort. The alternative is this collection of elected boneheads will increase spending. Any cut is far better even if it's no way near enough. Pass the rescission bill, then bring up the next rescission bill and pass it too. Continue until the budget is finally balanced so we can start reducing the national debt.
The federal government incentivizes waste, fraud and abuse. It's not that state governments don't also incentivizes waste, fraud and abuse, but they in theory only affect the specific state and we can vote with our feet. It's more difficult voting with your feed related to the federal government. Even if you leave the country, the federal government still forces tax collection unless you renounce your citizenship.
The federal government needs to be drastically reduced to a few very specific roles. Everything else should be at the state or even the county level.
I could walk down the street to city hall and have a reasonable chance of speaking to the mayor. I have very limited chance of ever speaking to the governor of my state, and pigs will fly before I could speak to a president.
Local government will always reflect the needs of a local area than a remote government will. Remote government will push solutions based on the needs of densely populated areas even if when applying common sense their solution would be counter-productive.
Good start. But need more cuts, less cowbell.
https://www.usdebtclock.org/
About 3/4 of the federal government budget consists of only four areas:
1. Social Security
2. Healthcare (mostly Medicare and Medicaid)
3. National Defense
4. Interest on the national debt
Unless you do something about these, all these little cuts matter not one iota.
But #4 is increasing because of the One Big Ugly Bill that Trump just signed.
#3 is increasing because Trump wants more weapons for his parades, even though they are useless for actual military use. The F-35 flying turkey is well known to be too expensive to risk in any actual threat situation; his F-47 is far MORE expensive. When you can produce fifty or a hundred or two hundred drones for the cost of one manned combat aircraft, the aircraft crew is doomed. But they look good in parades -- and on the balance sheets of the military industrial complex corporations.
Democrats are equally guilty. Bernie Sanders loves the F-35 even though his own defense policy advisor Bill French was an eloquent opponent -- because it provides a few hundred jobs in Vermont. Dems love aircraft carriers because they are built at the Huntington Ingalls shipyard in Newport News, which is one of very very very few unionized factories in any right to work state and probably the largest. Democratic voters who work for defense contractors in northern Virginia and Tidewater are now essential to that state remaining blue; the poorer areas that don't get the government largesse still vote red (and are not helped by Trump at all).
For #2, the One Big Ugly Bill does contain a massive cut to Medicaid. This might not actually happen once rural members of Congress -- who are almost all Republican -- realize that their about to be unemployed hospital workers aren't going to be happy to be unemployable after the rural hospitals close. A dirty little secret is that rural hospitals not only provide health care, they are often the only source of well paying jobs with benefits for dozens of miles around. I don't have a lot of sympathy as most of those communities voted overwhelmingly for Trump and the Republicans.
Medicare is also getting trimmed but the high profit Medicare Advantage plans won't be. Corporate welfare.
#1 is off limits. Politicians who call for redoing Social Security don't get re-elected. And the experience in Chile with a privatized social security system resulted in most persons facing retirement having inadequate assets. This resulted in the election of the first leftist there since Allende. His approval rating is now in the low 20s. The only good news is that the military does not look like it wants to pursue a coup.