When Elon Musk called
President Donald Trump’s “Big Beautiful Bill” a “disgusting
abomination,” he was right for the wrong reasons. Musk, America’s
corporate welfare poster boy, focused on the White House budget bill’s
pork-barrel spending and its impact on deficits. “This immense level of
overspending will drive America into debt slavery!” the billionaire
wrote on X, noting it would “massively increase the already gigantic
budget deficit to $2.5 trillion.”
Boosting
U.S. debt to a level where annual interest payments exceed national
defense spending and drive up the cost of borrowing for homes, autos and
household expenses is certainly concerning. Never mind that Musk,
recently ushered out of the White House after his damaging DOGE stint as
Chainsaw Elon, is probably also peeved at Trumpian plans to eliminate
the electrical vehicle subsidies so important to his tanking automaker
Tesla.
What Musk and
other deficit hawks ignore is the human cost of the Trump budget, which
reaches into every aspect of life facing struggling families in America
today — from housing and health care to childcare, education, and
nutrition. The centerpiece of the bill is a massive reverse Robin Hood
giveaway to the nation’s wealthiest income earners and big businesses,
who will line their pockets and buy back stocks rather than invest the
windfall in their workers or enterprises.
According
to the Center for Budget Priorities, the top 1% of earners will get a
$70,000 income boost in the first year alone. Estimates from the Penn
Wharton and the Congressional Budget Office say that the bill will
reduce the takehome incomes of the bottom 10 percent of income-earner by
4% by the end of the decade and leave most households earning less than
$51,000 with an after-tax income decrease. To partially pay for the
unholy mess — which includes increased funding for border patrols and
deportation stormtroopers — Trump cuts deeply into social spending,
putting families at risk.
Medicaid,
the federal health insurance program for the poor that splits costs
between states and the federal government, would see an $800 million
reduction in support over 10 years. Of the 71 million people currently
getting health care through Medicaid, as many as 10 million could lose
coverage through a series of cuts and policy changes. The stakes are
enormous. Black and brown Americans make up 31% of the U.S. population
but close to half of all Medicaid enrollees. One of the most onerous
proposed policy changes is the introduction of work requirements for
able-bodied recipients under the age of 65 – 64% of whom are already
working full or part time. Reporting requirements to verify 80 hours of
work or volunteer activity per month have shown in the past to be
cumbersome, expensive and ineffective. They’ve ultimately resulted in
reductions in Medicaid enrollees – which is the cynically hidden goal at
the heart of the change.
The
Trump bill would cut federal support for housing by 44%, devastating
programs to address affordable housing, homelessness and community
development programs. Under the guise of giving states more autonomy in
federal spending, U.S. Department of Housing and Urban
Development rental assistance initiatives would be lumped together in
block grants, with a total allocation reduction of $26.7 billion.
Section 8 housing vouchers for projects and individual tenants would be
at risk. Support for senior housing and housing for people with
disabilities would shrink. According to the National Low Income Housing
Coalition, the impact on some 4.4 million of the country’s poorest
households would result in rising homelessness and social instability.
On
the schools front, Trump’s efforts to eliminate the U.S. Department of
Education take place while proposing a $4.5 billion cut to federal K-12
programs and close to $8 billion in reductions to higher education
support and other programs, including civil rights enforcement, student
safety, and workforce training. Streamlining funding to fit into block
grants where states decide on spending allocations would reduce
accountability and make it easier to slash budgets further down the
road. While Head Start has been spared from total elimination in the
budget, some sites have already had to close their doors because of
claw-backs from previously authorized appropriations. Meanwhile, the
Trump budget does limit the availability of the child tax credit to
citizen children with a citizen parent.
While
cutting as much as $300 billion in nutritional aid to low-income
families, Trump would also impose work requirements on recipients of the
Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program. These cuts, the largest in
history to what was formerly known as food stamps, would place millions
of children at risk, take food away from millions of poor adults and
increase poverty and hardship in America.
In
Trump world, struggling families who can’t afford to keep the
thermostat up in cold winters will no longer receive fuel subsidies as
the Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program would be eliminated.
Households that choose to buy food and pay for medicine rather than pay
for heat often turn to dangerous methods to stay warm, like open stoves
or space heaters.
The
administration’s comprehensive war on the poor is bad enough but the
White House also tries to insulate itself from legal consequences by a
provision, slipped into the budget bill by the House, to block any
funding to enforce contempt of court orders.
By
now, America is accustomed to Trump’s practice of “flooding the zone”
with outrageous statements and executive actions, thereby overwhelming
critics and opponents unable to keep up an effective defense of American
values and principles. But the negative press over the harmful
consequences of Trump’s tariffs on the economy and household budgets and
the cruel impact of his proposed budget invited a White House
countermove. So, it was no surprise to hear Trump’s creepy domestic
policy aide, Stephen Miller, saying that the best way to restore law and
order in the wake of ICE protests in Los Angeles was to pass the budget
bill.
Don’t believe
the hype. Trump’s “Big Beautiful Bill” is bad for America. We hope there
are enough fiscally sane and morally sound U.S. senators to reject the
narrowly passed House version of the budget and produce a compromise
bill that doesn’t eviscerate our national safety net at a time when we
most need it.