Under Trump's budget proposal, members of the military, HIV testing and border security fare well; not so favored are health programs, farmers and food stamp recipients.
The electronic nicotine industry would pay up to $100 million in user fees under President Donald Trump’s plan to help the Food and Drug Administration regulate e-cigarettes, which aren’t currently subject to FDA approval.U.S. troops would get a hefty 3.1 percent pay raise next year, up from 2.6 percent this year, if Congress agrees to the president’s request.
” A total of $174 billion of Trump’s $750 billion request for the Defense Department would be stashed in an account that doesn’t count toward the budget caps meant to keep the government from running ever-higher debt and deficit tabs.The president is calling in his budget for providing six weeks of paid family leave to new mothers and fathers, including adoptive parents. But the proposal does not elaborate on how the federal government would fund such a program.
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