The NPR Politics Podcast - White House Memo Puts Federal Funding On Hold
Episode Date: January 28, 2025The White House budget office has ordered a pause on all federal grants, loans, and financial assistance programs according to a memo released Monday. What is known about this pause so far, what does... it impact, and how does it fit into Trump's plans to cut federal funding? This episode: White House correspondent Deepa Shivaram and political correspondents Stephen Fowler and Susan Davis.The podcast is produced by Bria Suggs & Kelli Wessinger, and edited by Casey Morell. Our executive producer is Muthoni Muturi.Listen to every episode of the NPR Politics Podcast sponsor-free, unlock access to bonus episodes with more from the NPR Politics team, and support public media when you sign up for The NPR Politics Podcast+ at plus.npr.org/politics.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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Hi, my name is Joe Wach. I am at Echo Lake Elementary School in Shoreline, Washington,
and I just got finished putting the finishing touches on the first edition of our monthly
newspaper, The Talon. This podcast was recorded at 106 p.m. on Tuesday, January 28th, 2025.
Things may have changed by the time you hear this, but our students will be better informed, which is so important in today's world. Okay, here's the show.
I worked on my elementary school some something.
I don't know if it was a newspaper or maybe it was the yearbook, but that's life-changing
stuff.
I'm curious to know if they have a print edition or if it's all online.
And if so, how they're reading it if they're elementary school kids.
Yeah, is it a newsletter? Are they on TikTok? I want to know. Hey there, it's
the NPR Politics Podcast. I'm Deepa Sivaram. I cover the White House.
I'm Stephen Fowler. I cover politics.
And I'm Susan Davis. I also cover politics.
All right. So big news from yesterday. The White House Budget Office ordered a pause
on all federal grants and loans. The internal memo states that, quote, the use of federal
resources to advance Marxist equity, transgenderism and Green New Deal social engineering policies
is a waste of taxpayer dollars that does not improve the day to day lives of those we serve.
So this pause has set off alarm bells among Democrats, including Senate minority leader
Chuck Schumer. This decision is lawless, dangerous, destructive, cruel. It's illegal. It's unconstitutional.
All right. A lot to get into. So Sue, I'm going to start with you. Let's start from
the top. What exactly does this memo say?
Well, there's a lot we don't know. So let's start with what we do know. The memo came
from Matthew Veith. He's the acting director of the Office of Management and Budget. The
pending director, Russ Vogt, has not yet been confirmed of the Office of Management and Budget. The pending
director Russ Vogt has not yet been confirmed by the Senate. And in this two-page memo,
he outlines noting that in fiscal year 2024, of the $10 trillion that the US federal government
spent, $3 trillion of that was through federal financial assistance programs like grants
and loans. And they're essentially saying as of five o'clock today, they want to freeze those grant and loan programs to make sure that they are in compliance with the other
executive orders that Donald Trump has issued since he took office, particularly on things like
ending diversity, equity and inclusion programs across the federal government.
The impact isn't entirely clear, but I do want to note that our colleague Franco Ordonez did report out that this doesn't affect things like Medicare payments or Social
Security payments or direct assistance to Americans, but it does seem to, as far as
we can tell, put a pause on grant and loan programs that could basically affect people
and programs across the breadth of the federal
government.
And that's not a small thing. Like, we're talking about people's jobs, people's livelihoods.
Like, this is a large impact that this could potentially have and is already having.
Sure. And I'll give you just two examples to think about. One that one member of Congress
noted is that a lot of small child care providers and child care offerings get federal grant
money to help underwrite the costs to run their child care programs. And if that money stops, they have
to shut down. They don't have the money to operate. They can't pay their staffs. Another
example, so much of the agriculture department's research is done through grant funding, especially
through universities and places like California and Texas and Illinois. If those grant programs
dry up, there's essentially no more ag research in the entire country. Now, I should also note that the same source
that talked to Franco said that some of these freezes could be just a day. Sure, a one-day
freeze probably isn't going to have that much of an impact, but days, weeks, months,
you'll start to feel a bigger and bigger effect.
SONIA DARAGOS And the bottom line is that there's still
a lot of confusion here. I mean, these are things like the very top. You said there's
things we know and there's things we don't
know. A lot of this has just put everyone into a tizzy.
Yes. And to Chuck Schumer's point, these are funds that, generally speaking, have gone
through the annual appropriations process in Congress. They have been approved by Congress.
The spending has been directed by Congress. The constitutional authority to direct that
funding lies with Congress. Now, there's always room in which the executive branch can help maneuver those funds or have
oversight over those funds, but to fully pause them or stop them, we don't know what happens
if they determine that some grant funding programs are not in compliance with other
executive orders. Does that end the program funding? So there's just a million questions.
I think one of the things we're looking to see is how do Republicans on Capitol Hill respond?
Generally speaking, historically speaking, conservatives like to believe that the power of the purse relies with Congress.
But obviously, we've seen that this is a pretty pliant Congress when it comes to the president and going along with what he wants to do.
So I don't anticipate there's going to be a big amount of Republican pushback yet.
And Sue, I do want to point out that this is a little bit of deja vu from Trump's first term,
where there is this big sweeping proclamation of a thing, a capital T thing. In this case,
you know, freeze on grant funding and other things to stop woke-ism, then there is the next step of figuring out, okay, what
does that actually mean?
We've already had some bit of walk back from the White House and Office of Management and
Budget with some clarifications on background about this isn't a freeze, this is just a
lawfully allowed review.
And no, that program won't be cut and this program won't be cut
And so we're at the point where it's still the early phases
But we have seen this chapter and book before with Trump's first term
But this is just at a larger scale and I will point out that
Having spent a lot of time on the campaign trail covering Trump
This is just things that he has said he is going to do
as soon as he took office. And at a certain level, that is being accomplished and he is delivering on
his promise to his constituents and voters. Now the reality of what that looks like and how long
it will take to litigate that and figure things out, that's secondary in some regards, I think.
Yeah, and I do think when things like this happen, part of the reason why we say it causes
chaos is like, look, federal workers work within compliance of federal law.
And if you were working on a program that suddenly its existing or its mandate is being
questioned by the White House, it creates a ton of questions, and they're going to want
guidance from internal councils.
They're going to make sure they're in compliance.
So it can have a tremendous slowdown effect. I would also say I'm curious about if these freezes
go for any significant period of time, I would think maybe even a month might be
considered significant when you're talking about that kind of money that
goes out the door over the course of a fiscal year, does it start to have a
broader economic impact? Like the federal government getting money out the door is
a critical part of the health of the US economy. So I think that that's when you start to see some nervousness
among members of Congress and other people about how long is this going to be? What are
the broader economic impacts? And for a lot of members of Congress, what does this mean
for my state? What does this mean for my district?
Correct. For their constituents. All right. We're going to take a quick break and we'll
be back in a moment. And we're back. And one thing I just want
to underscore from our conversation on this pause slash freeze, we don't know how long
it's going to go for on federal funds. You know, this is a massive power grab from Trump,
Sue, and can you kind of put that into context a little bit of like how impactful this really
is?
Well, I think you have to look at this executive order in
the context of the other directives towards the federal government. And look, it's only
been week one, right? Consider this direction on federal loans and grant programs to the
freeze on federal aid, stopping programs internationally. I think what Trump is doing is profound. The
halt on hiring federal workers, putting people on paid leave. I think that he is really trying to, as he campaigned on, remake the entirety of the
federal government. I think that even some of his supporters are kind of blown back by
how prepared they were this time around, especially because so much of this is already happening
before his cabinet has even been put into place. And
I do think that that does tell us something that this power is coming directly from the
White House. There is no waiting to get your nominee in to feedback up to the White House
to say what they think should be done. This is all coming from the top down.
And Stephen, I mean, one of the things you've been reporting on recently, and I want to
have you jump in on this, speaking of power coming from the top, one of the executive orders that Trump signed on day one was creating this Department of Government
Efficiency, commonly known as DOJ, helmed by Elon Musk. And, you know, that department is tasked with
cutting federal spending. But how are you learning about how this is working so far? Tell us what
your reporting has told you. So with Elon Musk and for a time Vivek Ramaswamy, now that he has left the Department of Government
Efficiency effort to potentially run for governor of Ohio, Doge was kind of envisioned as this
outside of the government organization that can open things up and look at the government's
people and policies and spending and figure
out ways to cut, cut, cut.
That's not the mandate of what is in the executive order.
The executive order makes this DOGE initiative a temporary organization that exists within
a currently existing office called the United States Digital Service. The United States Digital Service is
being renamed as the United States DOJ service, same acronym, different meaning, but the DOJ
initiative is being tasked with working with federal agencies to find ways to advance the
DOJ agenda. What is the DOJ agenda? We don't know yet. Right. And one thing, you know, that's sort of a question that's swirling around here
is the timeline, right? Like how fast can this really get done? And clearly Trump is
moving very quickly on some of his plans, things that he talked about in the campaign.
But when it comes to that cut, cut, cut, trim, trim, trim, realistically, how fast can the
federal government actually move on that?
That's where it's interesting to look at the history of the United States DOJ
service, formerly known as the digital service, and it's this sort of digital
strike team that makes government better and more efficient and in turn save
money. But it's things that have been smaller in scale and have still taken
time to do, So it's not really
clear that even with this Doge mandate more aligning with what President Trump wants to do,
that it can get through the glacial pace of government and all of the bureaucratic red tape.
I will say that when I've talked to members of Congress about what role they want to see
Doge play, they focus heavily on the government efficiency component of it and
less on the spending cut part of it. Again, they're like, it's our job to cut spending.
But the president and the executive branch does have a tremendous amount of unilateral
power to make the executive branches run more efficiently. And I do think in that regard,
like the Department of Government Efficiency makes a very easy and obvious political sense
because it's like who's against that, right? Like what is the argument against a more efficient government? I will say
that I think that Democrats have been dancing around the Doge effort trying to get a sense of
how serious it is. Do they want to play ball with it? And I have talked to Democrats who were saying
that like, look, we want to get a sense of whether this is good faith or not. Do they really want to
sit down and figure out ways to make the government more efficient, to do smart spending cuts, or is this just a
backdoor way to try to enact more of Donald Trump's policy agenda? And I would say when
you tie together these executive orders and these efforts to shut down loan programs and
cut off foreign aid and reduce federal workers, I think that the political willingness of
Democrats to lean in to the Doge effort is going to get less and less by the day because I think increasingly they are not seeing this
broader effort as one that they would consider good faith or intended to be bipartisan.
And there are some elements of this too that are like, you know, efficiency is the brand
name of all of it.
But the thing I'm thinking about, especially as you mentioned, USDS, the digital service,
Stephen, I mean, Trump, like, day one reneged on former President
Biden's, you know, executive order on AI, right?
And part of that was, you know, using the digital service, like, bringing more experts
in to, like, help the government improve their technology.
Like, it was supposed to be an efficiency-type thing.
So, like, as all this is going on, there are, like, a number of things that are also, like,
highly inefficient that are going on.
You know, I will say I talked to the former administrator of the U.S. Digital Service
for my reporting and they say that there are a lot of things about the way the government
operates that are not efficient and there are things that Trump can do and Elon Musk
can do to make things better regardless of partisan intent, but it revolves around
good faith engagement with the federal agencies and the people that are working in those agencies
to find the pain points and fix them.
But in the grander scheme that Trump has put out so far of trying to have ultimate power
over the purse and ultimate power over the way the federal government is run that might not be as high of a priority. Yeah look I think that people
will know the effectiveness of the Doge effort relatively soon. The president has
said this isn't going to be a long-running new government program.
It's set to expire on the 4th of July 2026 which will coincide with the 250
anniversary of America by which point Donald Trump says he will have made
America great again but the ultimate work of Doge is going to be conducted in pretty
short order compared to how broader federal efforts to rein in spending have gone.
Yeah, a lot to keep watching for.
All right, we're going to leave it there for today.
I'm Deepa Sivaram.
I cover the White House.
I'm Stephen Fowler.
I cover politics.
And I'm Susan Davis.
I also cover politics.
And thank you for listening to the NPR politics podcast.