Trump's impossible budget

The president's annual budget proposal illustrates a fundamental contradiction in Republican policy priorities

A forklift.
(Image credit: Illustrated | insemar/iStock, DickDuerrstein/iStock, Isovector/iStock)

President Trump released his latest proposed budget for the U.S. government on Monday. No sooner was the news announced than reminders that these annual proposals are "political documents," not actual governing policy began proliferating. And while that is of course true, Trump's budgets are especially striking: Not just for the gap between the proposals and what is realistically achievable, but for the gap between the proposals and what Trump himself seems to actually give a flip about.

The first thing to grasp about Trump's budget proposal is how absolutely insane its priorities are. The problem here is pretty straightforward: The Republican Party has long been obsessed with eliminating America's federal deficit — the shortfall between how much annual tax revenue it brings in and how much it spends. But Trump and his party want to protect military spending, and Trump himself has repeatedly promised to hold Social Security and Medicare harmless. Those three commitments rule out reductions to almost two-thirds of annual spending.

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Jeff Spross

Jeff Spross was the economics and business correspondent at TheWeek.com. He was previously a reporter at ThinkProgress.