The NPR Politics Podcast - White House Walks Back Federal Funding Memo
Episode Date: January 30, 2025On Monday, the White House budget office ordered a freeze on all federal funding. Yesterday, the White House walked that memo back after days of chaos and confusion. This episode: White House correspo...ndents Deepa Shivaram and Tamara Keith and senior political editor and correspondent Domenico Montanaro.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
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, this is Jason in Seattle, Washington. I'm currently prepping for a goodbye party as my spouse and I also pack up our entire lives as we prepare a move to Lisbon, Portugal.
This podcast was recorded at 12.35 p.m. on Thursday, January 30th, 2025.
Things may have changed by the time you hear it, but hopefully we will have arrived safely in our new apartment with their senior Chihuahua peanut and enjoying a glass of port wine.
Vamos lá.
Love.
Oh my gosh.
Absolutely lovely.
I want to go to Portugal.
It is on my list.
I have friends who live in Portugal, actually, who used to live in the US.
It's really interesting how they were able to do that.
So I hope you enjoy it.
That'd be great.
I don't think I would go with the port wine personally.
I don't like it that sweet.
There's other good dry wines.
And a pastel de nada too.
Hey there, it's the NPR Politics Podcast.
I'm Deepa Sivaram.
I cover the White House.
I'm Tamara Keith.
I also cover the White House.
And I'm Domenico Montanaro, senior political editor and correspondent.
Okay.
So earlier today, President Trump briefed the nation on the plane crash that happened
last night in D.C.
Just before 9 p.m., an American Airlines flight carrying about 60 people from Wichita, Kansas,
crashed into a military helicopter.
There are no survivors.
It was the first airline crash like this to take place since 2009, and there are investigations
ongoing on how this happened, and the cause is not known.
But this afternoon, President Trump weighed in
and he seemed to blame the crash on diversity, equity,
and inclusion hiring efforts at the FAA.
We'll have more information when we do actually know
what is going on, but this is all worth mentioning,
Domenico, because DEI efforts are a pretty big through line
for a lot of President Trump's agenda
on how he's trying to restructure the government.
It's probably the most bizarre briefing
I've ever heard after a disaster.
Usually presidents and officials
have the information that they have
that they can present that they've confirmed
because they want it to be responsible.
But instead Trump used it as a political cudgel
to back up the things that he believes
to be problems within the government while
also saying that he doesn't actually know if that's what caused any of this, but he's
throwing it out there because he has, quote, common sense.
And we talk about what the president's agenda has been just in the last week and some change.
The idea has been making the government, quote unquote, more efficient.
There was a big memo that came out on Monday that caused a lot of confusion.
It came from the Office of Management and Budget. Walk us through what happened there
because in the last 72-ish hours, there's been a lot of up and down.
Yeah. So there was this memo from the Office of Management and Budget. It was just two
pages and it said that there would be a spending freeze for the entirety of the government,
that there would be a review. And then those things had to align with the president's priorities, the executive orders that he'd already put out.
It was unclear what exactly would be cut or would not be cut, but it exempted direct payments to
people like for Medicare and Social Security. But that raised a whole lot of questions on programs
that are funded that people indirectly benefit from. Things like Title I funding for schools, for free lunches for kids, you know, low-income
heating programs, meals on wheels. There were a lot of questions. It wasn't just
the media. It was all of those organizations that were very confused.
The White House doubled down. They said that it was clear. They then tried to put
out more guidance for Congress to say the kinds of programs that would not
be affected, but it certainly did not spell out all of the programs that would not be
affected.
So people were very confused.
The memo was supposed to go into effect at five o'clock Tuesday, but a federal judge
stepped in and blocked that.
So the rescission that happened the next day really seemed to be trying to get the Trump
administration out of court because then you heard from the White House press secretary,
Caroline Levitt, who then said that the freeze is still in effect,
it's just the memo that had been rescinded.
Yeah. And, Tam, I mean, you covered the first iteration of the Trump administration.
There's so many parallels that I feel like we could draw just in the first, like,
six, seven days of, like, how much chaos there was.
And, you know, talk to me about that era too, because, you know,
when the travel ban, I'm thinking, came out, there was a lot of this similar sentiment
of like, you know, the White House thinks they're giving a clear directive and everyone
else is just like, we actually have no idea what you're talking about.
Yes, there are echoes of the first term where the Trump administration put in place through
executive order a ban on travel from people coming from Muslim majority countries,
several Muslim majority countries. There was immediately chaos at the airports. They hadn't
actually explained the policy and how it would work to the people who would be implementing
it before it went into effect. And that was something very similar with this, where there
was a very immediate deadline that everything was going to have to pause.
So all of a sudden, people didn't know what to do,
how it would affect them.
Eventually, the White House came down and said,
really the only thing affected are programs
that are implicated by the executive orders
that President Trump has hired in the first week.
And this gets back to where we were before
because that includes executive orders banning diversity, equity and inclusion. It
includes going after transgender care. It includes environmental and climate programs
trying to reverse those. Then they said, no, it's just those things. And at least according
to Caroline Levitt's tweet, the pause is still on for those things.
Getting into the politics of this a little bit, Domenico, I mean, how is this being framed?
I mean, is this considered like, you know, a backtrack, a failure on Trump's agenda
for the most part?
And I'm curious how Democrats are kind of framing this as well.
Well, this was clearly the first major misstep that the Trump administration created trying
to do something fast and bold, but that's not always the best way to
run the government. Being able to do this though, obviously part of the Trump playbook to flood the
zone, to try to create confusion, to try to make people off balance, it actually wound up unifying
Democrats because they hadn't figured out before that really what to focus in on. And they seem
to be able to focus in on a message of here's what government actually does do for you. And here's what the Trump administration doesn't seem to know
the government does. And they started to kind of find some of their own unity when they didn't
have it previously. I think a big important piece of the confusion here was also though,
about presidential power and about how far Trump wants to test the limits of the presidency,
considering that the country was founded on having three separate but equal branches of
government to be able to put a check and a balance on the other two branches.
And what raised questions about what Trump was doing here is whether or not his administration
would continue to fund or dole out the funds that had already been specifically
approved by Congress. If he doesn't do that, that's something that would certainly be challenged,
brought to court, and he'd be testing the limits of just how far the Supreme Court would
go in his favor.
Danielle Pletka Well, and Domenico, let's just be clear. There is no mystery here. They
are trying to test the limits of presidential power. This White House, White House Counsel's Office,
everyone around President Trump believes
in a very expansive view of presidential power.
They believe that the president has the legal authority
to stop spending money that Congress told him
he had to spend, and they wanna test it.
They wanna get it to the Supreme Court.
They want to defend it because they believe
that they will win, especially with this court.
All right. We're going to take a quick break and we'll be back in a moment.
Wait, wait, don't tell me. Fresh air up first.
NPR News Now, Planet Money, Ted Radio Hour, ThruLine, the NPR Politics podcast, Code Switch,
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Yesterday in a different White House memo, President Trump instructed his administration
to house 30,000 migrants deported from the country at Guantanamo Bay.
We have 30,000 beds in Guantanamo to detain the worst criminal illegal aliens threatening
the American people. Some of them are so bad, we don't even trust the countries to hold
them because we don't want them coming back. So we're going to send them out to Guantanamo.
Domenico, walk us through the history of Guantanamo Bay. I mean, there's a lot going on this week, but why was this announcement significant?
Well, I think what's important here, number one, this is not where enemy combatants who
the Bush administration had brought over during the global war on terror, they would not be
in that same facility or in that area.
It's a different area run by the Navy.
And it's not clear, though, that there are actually that many beds. It has been used to detain migrants who tried to go to the
United States who were dissidents from places like Cuba, for example. What's important here
legally is that when the Bush administration started doing this, it was intended because
they didn't want to have people step foot in the United States
because the fear was for them that if they had people step foot in the United States,
then they would be subject to due process and the U.S. judicial system.
This is going to create all kinds of legal issues because the migrants that they want
to put in this facility are not people who are on boats who are coming here who had never
stepped foot in the United States
These are folks who are already in the United States and now they want to put there and Tim
Would this be the first time that migrants are held at Guantanamo the way that Domenico is talking about?
I mean, this is I assume not you know standard procedure. Yeah, so as Domenico said there is a facility to
to sort of process people who are
facility to sort of process people who are apprehended at sea or in many cases rescued at sea and then get them back to their home countries.
What President Trump and his Republican allies in Congress are talking about is on a different
scale and a different type of thing.
They are saying there are people that are so bad that we can't just deport them back to their home countries.
We have to house them on an island.
That is a pretty big shift.
This is going to require congressional action, congressional funding.
And this is something that Trump had talked about wanting to do before, but it didn't
work out. We will see if in Trump 2.0, he is better able and
more effective at getting these sorts of things where there are, as Domenico says, legal questions.
Well, yeah, I mean, legally speaking, like if he doesn't have congressional approval,
question mark to get this done, is this something that he can try to do through an executive
order?
He can try to do whatever he wants through
an executive order. And like we said in the earlier segment, try to push the limits of
the presidency to see what he's allowed to actually be able to do. And then there would
have to be lawsuits that are taken into the courts and then see if those courts uphold
his executive order or if they deem it to be unconstitutional.
Danielle Pletka And he did sign an executive order, but it's
essentially calling on Homeland Security and the Department of Defense to do stuff. It isn't like, and I bequeath that this happens.
He would need money and authority. But as we know, Congress, Republicans in Congress
are very eager to pass a big spending bill related to immigration enforcement. This could
in theory be wrapped into that and their desire
is to do that without any democratic votes using a procedural maneuver.
I will say though, it does lend itself to the broader problem of what to do with migrants
who the US wants to send back to countries that won't take them. Venezuela is a perfect
example of this because temporary protected status would be stripped from Venezuelans who have come to the United States as political dissidents seeking asylum
from the government there.
If that were to be the case, where do you put them?
This issue with Guantanamo is going to be potentially held up in courts.
So they're going to run into some issues on what to do with folks whose countries don't
want to take them back.
Yeah. I'm curious if this unfolds into like one of, almost on the same vein of the OMB
memo of they throw out the biggest picture possible, right? And then it kind of gets
scaled down, scaled down, scaled down, depending on what is realistically feasible.
Sure. And we saw that in the first Trump round with him scaling back the travel ban, for
example. I mean, initially on the campaign, it had been all Muslims coming to the United States.
Then it wound up being much more tailored
to specific countries,
and they had to lay out national security reasons for why.
And then, because this is the Trump administration,
they will say that they got the maximalist thing.
They will say that they did it, they solved it,
even if what they ultimately got was sort of scaled back,
as we saw with that Office of Management
and Budget memo, which was rescinded, but then they said, we're not actually changing our policy.
And I'm going to be really curious to see if there's any kind of push for comprehensive
immigration overhaul, because there are so many problems that are going to be exposed and have
been exposed by this, including how many judges are in the court. There's too few of them. Some of them
have backlogs of years
because they're not able to adjudicate cases
of the millions of people who are here without legal status.
Okay, I think we're going to leave it there for today.
I'm Deepa Sivaram. I cover the White House.
I'm Tamara Keith. I also cover the White House.
And I'm Domenico Montanaro,
senior political editor and correspondent.
And thank you for listening to the NPR Politics Podcast.