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When We Disinvest in People, We All Pay the Price

The fiscal year 2027 budget proposal from President Trump is a shocking departure from values most Americans hold.
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Presidents release their federal spending priorities annually in the form of a federal budget proposal. This is a moral rather than a practical document — the president’s budget virtually never passes Congress as written. Instead, it expresses the values of presidents and how they want to see the nation’s revenues raised and investments spent. It’s a blueprint for the kind of country they want us to be.

These priorities fluctuate depending on which administration and party is in power. The fiscal year 2027 budget proposal from President Trump is a shocking departure from values most Americans hold.

The budget proposal builds on the values legislated through Trump’s so-called “One Beautiful Bill,” passed last year, which stole from the rest of us to give tax breaks to the uber-wealthy and the richest corporations.

If we judge Trump’s values by this budget, we could reasonably conclude he values only Pentagon bloat, aggressive assaults against immigrant families, and stripping rights from transgender people. Meanwhile, families and communities are essentially thrown to the wolves.

The most eye-popping number is the proposed $1.5 trillion for the Pentagon — a huge increase over the already astronomical $1 trillion spent this year. ICE, which has brazenly abused immigrants and U.S. citizens, would also get billions more — over and above the unprecedented sums it got in the “Big Beautiful Bill.”

What wouldn’t get an increase in Trump’s budget? Programs that actually help people. This budget proposes a 10 percent cut to all non-Pentagon discretionary spending.

The Department of Health and Human Services is cut by 12.5 percent. The Department of Agriculture, 25 percent. The Department of Labor is slashed by 26 percent, and the Environmental Protection Agency is cut in half.

Jobs Corps for young people and work assistance for seniors are eliminated. After-school programs and food assistance for children are slashed. The federal government’s signature housing program, HOME, is zeroed out entirely.

At a time when families are navigating rising living costs, stagnant wages and a tight job market, this budget proposes deep cuts to the programs that help them get by. Education, food and housing assistance, home energy assistance, and worker rights — all either zeroed out or drastically reduced. Even the children’s summer food program and the fruit and vegetable benefits of food stamps are cut.

Mind you, all this would come on top of the historic $1 trillion cut to Medicaid, SNAP, and other programs under the “Big Beautiful Bill.” Those cuts aren’t a proposed blueprint — they’ve already been passed into law.

Children feel these effects the most. Reduced access to Head Start and school-based nutrition and disability services doesn’t just affect the present moment — they shape lifelong outcomes. Food insecurity, unstable housing, and a lack of early education create barriers that no child should have to try to overcome.

Transgender people, already under aggressive attack, are targeted in this budget — for example, historic cuts to the National Institutes of Health include eliminating research on the health of trans people.

The document also repeatedly scapegoats the trans community for cuts to programs that have virtually nothing to do with them. For instance, university programs that support vulnerable students were eliminated because the administration claims they fund “clothing needs for transgender people.” Cuts to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association were justified, in part, because the agency allegedly held a workshop for transgender people.

These disinvestments destabilize entire communities and local economies. Public health suffers and income inequality increases.

A nation’s strength is not measured solely by its military spending or economic indicators. It is measured by whether its people — especially its most vulnerable — have what they need to live with dignity. This budget fails that test.

We know what works. Investments in education, nutrition, health, housing, care, income and work supports. These investments stabilize communities and improve the economy. Choosing to cut these programs is not inevitable. It is a policy decision whose adverse effects will be felt for generations.

We must demand robust investments in family, community and basic human needs. These are our national values, not war and the prosecution of immigrant children.  Because when we disinvest in people, we all pay the price.

Originally in InsideSources.

For press inquiries, contact IPS Deputy Communications Director Olivia Alperstein at olivia@ips-dc.org. For recent press statements, visit our Press page.

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