CABINET SHAKE-UP? Trump pushed back Sunday on reports of additional Cabinet swaps coming after his ousting of former Attorney General Pam Bondi.
Trump told The Hill that the country is on the right track and other changes aren’t coming.
Speculation has swirled in the days since Bondi was fired that other Cabinet members may be next. Bondi was the second member of Trump’s second-term Cabinet to leave their role during the administration, coming just weeks after the firing of former Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem.
Reports have raised questions about the future of several Cabinet members, including FBI Director Kash Patel, Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and Labor Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer.
But the White House and Trump’s allies have denied that additional changes are forthcoming.
“Secretaries Chavez-DeRemer and Lutnick are both doing a great job standing up for American workers, and they continue to have President Trump’s full support,” White House spokesperson Taylor Rogers said in a statement.
“POTUS has total confidence in [Gabbard] and any insinuation otherwise is totally fake news,” White House communications director Steven Cheung said in a statement on X.
Still, this wouldn’t be the first time the administration has praised a Cabinet member before their exit. Trump said Bondi was doing a “good job” in response to a report of her impending departure before he ultimately fired her, though the White House didn’t issue a full-blown denial as it has with some of the other Cabinet members currently being talked about.
▪ The Washington Post: Trump wants to avoid ‘massive shake-up.’
▪ Time: Who Trump has replaced in the administration.
FUNDING PUSH: House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) called on Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) to bring the lower chamber back from recess early to reopen the Department of Homeland Security (DHS).
Jeffries said Sunday on ABC’s “This Week” that Johnson should bring the House back to “stop creating chaos at airports all across the country” and forcing employees to continue working without pay.
The House convened in a pro forma session last week but didn’t take action on the bill. The chamber isn’t currently set to return from its Easter recess until next week.
After Trump came out in favor of a two-step process to fund most of DHS through the normal appropriations procedure and cover immigration enforcement through reconciliation, the Senate passed a bill to fund all DHS agencies except for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Border Patrol. It now awaits action in the House.
All DHS workers are set to get relief after weeks of no pay as Trump formally ordered the department on Friday to pay its employees, following up on an order to pay Transportation Security Administration (TSA) employees.
But that’s a temporary solution for the funding gap.
Even with support from Johnson and other members of House GOP leadership, getting the funding plan through the House may not be easy, with members of the staunchly conservative House Freedom Caucus slamming it for not including funding for immigration enforcement.
Some Republicans want to deal with ICE funding in a reconciliation bill. But that too is complicated, with GOP members hoping to focus on other priorities such as voting reform, Iran war funding and cuts aimed at fraud in federal programs, The Hill’s Sudiksha Kochi and Emily Brooks report.
Trump wants a reconciliation bill on his desk by June 1.
▪ The Hill: Trump detachment, GOP divisions stifle efforts to reopen DHS.
▪ NewsNation: How to check TSA wait times.
BUDGET REQUEST: The White House is seeking $1.5 trillion for defense in its 2027 budget request, roughly a 40 percent increase from the current fiscal levels.
A base of $1.1 trillion will be requested for the Defense Department, while $350 million would be for “critical Administration priorities” such as more munitions and defense industrial base expansions. The second portion would be passed through reconciliation.
Trump had floated the idea of a record-breaking defense budget request in January, saying such a budget would allow the U.S. to build its “Dream Military.”
The request is sure to face pushback from Congress. Democrats quickly slammed the proposal, arguing it doesn’t address Americans’ needs and undermines domestic programs and priorities.
The budget request features a 10 percent cut, equivalent to $73 billion, in nondefense spending, focused on cutting spending on housing, community, environmental, health care and other programs.
Some of those cuts were panned by Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine), the top Republican appropriator.
▪ Politico: Trump plans spending millions on White House renovations.
▪ The Hill: Budget would cut TSA funding, require privatization at small airports.
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