President Donald Trump may still style himself as a D.C. outsider, but since his first campaign he has eagerly wielded the politician’s age-old cliché about wanting to root out “waste, fraud and abuse” to evade tough questions about his budget proposals.
Unsurprisingly, Trump has inserted the “waste, fraud and abuse” phrase into the rhetoric around the most important bill of his second term so far: legislation that would extend 2017’s tax cuts and partially offset the lost revenue with at least $1.5 trillion in spending reductions. However, the “big, beautiful bill,” in Trump’s typically understated parlance, faces several big roadblocks, with House Republicans debating the cap on state and local taxes, cuts to food stamps and more.
If concern for the “most vulnerable” sounds distinctly un-Trumpian, that’s because the language comes from congressional Republicans.
The largest obstacle, though, is the amount of money the GOP would have to take from Medicaid, the health care program that covers 72 million people. The House GOP’s budget blueprint tasks the Energy and Commerce Committee — which oversees Medicare and Medicaid — with finding at least $880 billion in savings over 10 years. As the Congressional Budget Office concluded in March, the committee can’t come anywhere near that goal without cutting entitlements. Since Medicare is even more popular with the public, that leaves Medicaid on the chopping block by default.
But the committee has already pushed back its timeline as Republicans struggle to finalize the numbers. And there’s another problem: Trump hasn’t figured out how to lie about Medicaid cuts.
In February, he said Medicaid “isn’t going to be touched” and then, the next day, endorsed the House bill that very much “touches” it. Since then, he’s mostly claimed that Republicans will target only “waste, fraud and abuse.” But at an event in Michigan last week, the president sounded yet another note. “We want to preserve Medicaid for the most vulnerable, for our kids, our pregnant women, the poor and disabled,” he said.
If concern for the “most vulnerable” sounds distinctly un-Trumpian, that’s because the language comes from congressional Republicans. Republicans on the House Budget Committee, for example, used that language in their list of possible spending cuts earlier this year.








