ADVERTISEMENT

Cuts for thee, but not for me: Republicans beg for DOGE exemptions

cigaretteman

HB King
May 29, 2001
79,682
63,133
113
For my friends, everything. For my enemies, the law.
That’s an old diktat, usually attributed to an old Latin American dictator. But it could easily apply today, as cowardly Republicans beg President Donald Trump to spare them — and only them — from the DOGE chainsaw.

Make sense of the latest news and debates with our daily newsletter

Trump and Elon Musk’s U.S. DOGE Service are arbitrarily hacking away at critical government functions and services, including flight safety programs, cancer research, bird-flu tracking, food assistance and disaster aid. But when it comes to evaluating the wisdom of these cuts, the president’s allies appear less troubled by the merits of such decisions than by how they affect them personally.


For instance, Fox News anchor Jesse Watters recently pleaded during a segment on behalf of a friend laid off by DOGE, which stands for Department of Government Efficiency. Watters deemed the man worthy of his Pentagon post, unlike the rest of those good-for-nothing public servants working to keep Americans safe.

Meanwhile, Republican lawmakers — who possess actual power to set government spending — have been too cowed to rein in Trump and his unelected pal Musk. So, instead, they are soliciting special exemptions, while being careful not to sound like they’re criticizing the would-be kings.


https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2025/02/06/trump-musk-doge-secrecy/

For instance, as Trump works to slash biomedical funding for private research institutions, Sen. Katie Boyd Britt (R-Alabama) has praised his efforts: “Every cent of hard-earned taxpayer money should be spent efficiently, judiciously, and accountably — without exception,” Britt told AL.com when asked about the billions of dollars in cuts to National Institutes of Health grants.

Inconveniently, though, red-state universities and hospitals receive a whole lot of money from NIH, too. The University of Alabama at Birmingham, one of the largest employers in Britt’s state, is among several Alabama institutions that would lose about $47 million combined in annual funding under Trump’s decree. So Britt promised to sidle up to Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and lobby for a reprieve.

“A smart, targeted approach is needed in order to not hinder lifesaving, groundbreaking research at high-achieving institutions like those in Alabama,” she said. She added, “State-of-the-art facilities, equipment, and technology — along with the best and brightest people — are needed to fulfill President Trump’s vision.”
Follow Catherine Rampell
(Britt needn’t push much harder than that for now, as a court has temporarily blocked the measure.)

Elsewhere, Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (R-West Virginia) petitioned the Environmental Protection Agency to unfreeze funding for green school buses, which just so happen to be manufactured in West Virginia. Capito’s plea appears to be successful so far, as some of the money has been released.
Over in Kansas, Republican Sen. Jerry Moran is trying to restore an international food aid program that DOGE ended when it effectively shuttered the U.S. Agency for International Development. Just coincidentally, dissolving this program hurts Kansas farmers.

But Moran has clarified that he is otherwise still on board with the DOGE agenda and its efforts to fix unspecified problems: “I’m pleased to help find ways to make our delivery of food aid more effective, more efficient and remove the challenges and things that we’ve seen that are so disturbing.”

Which “things” are so disturbing? Presumably, funds going anywhere but Kansas.
Meanwhile, as Trump gleefully grinds down funding for the Federal Emergency Management Agency, some Republican leaders have grown nervous about whether their own constituents could get shortchanged after hurricanes or other disasters. But many appear to believe Trump is sufficiently transactional that they can wrangle exemptions out of him, perhaps in exchange for fawning or favors.
Sen. Thom Tillis (R-North Carolina), for example, has said he agrees with Trump’s approach to FEMA. “If it’s with an eye towards more efficiency and resiliency, great. If it’s an eye towards cutting funding to western North Carolina, not great,” Tillis told CNN.


As always, Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine) remains “concerned” — this time, about DOGE’s impact on her state “on everything from our national parks to biomedical research.” Of course, like the rest of her caucus, she voted to confirm nearly all of Trump’s Cabinet nominees implementing these arbitrary cuts.
So did her “moderate” Republican counterpart from Alaska, Sen. Lisa Murkowski. Murkowski is now asking “pretty much all the departments” to restore funds stripped from her state, as she told my Post colleagues. She called the administration’s responses “evasive and inadequate.” Good for her, I suppose. But even this is a milquetoast protest from someone whose branch, per Article I, is supposed to control the government’s purse strings.
Meanwhile, some lawmakers seem blissfully unaware of such powers.
 
I sent my congressman a very nice letter, WHO THE HELL GAVE YOU PERMISSION TO "OUTSOURCE YOUR JOB". Get off your dead ass and work for the people that but you in the HOUSE, if not then you lose our vote..
We had a friend who called her GOP rep to voice concerns. Of course, she got an aide who promised to convey those thoughts. She went through her points...then at the end, she asked him to read them back to her. He literally couldn't name a single one. She gave him a hint and he got the last one and that was it. She sarcastically thanked him for his attention.
 
We had a friend who called her GOP rep to voice concerns. Of course, she got an aide who promised to convey those thoughts. She went through her points...then at the end, she asked him to read them back to her. He literally couldn't name a single one. She gave him a hint and he got the last one and that was it. She sarcastically thanked him for his attention.
I would’ve told him to take notes this time and started all over again
 
Well ya. They voted to hurt the other people, not themselves. Those people deserve to be hurt. They are totally good Christians though, very moral people. Even if they mess up they just have to say sorry and continue on being an asshole without changing 1 thing. Will definitely get the thumbs up at the pearly gates.
 
Well ya. They voted to hurt the other people, not themselves. Those people deserve to be hurt. They are totally good Christians though, very moral people. Even if they mess up they just have to say sorry and continue on being an asshole without changing 1 thing. Will definitely get the thumbs up at the pearly gates.
When it was the homo kids an non whites being targeted it was cool. Now that it's FAFO time the squeals are getting loud.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Torg and Tom Paris
He'd have trashed them as soon as she hung up but yeah...I like that.

Our Representatives are no longer Representative due to corporate grift and also the massive increase in population they “represent” in 2025 compared to 100 and 200 years ago.

In 2025 we get 435 to represent 340 million people. 781k a rep.

In 1925 we had 435 to represent 115 million people. 266k people a rep

In 1825 we had 213 to represent 9.6 million people. 45k people a rep
 
I've said all along, the righties voted for trump and all of the things he was going to do, like it only affected the Democrats. As it goes along they are going to see it getting worse for them as well as us. The suckers and losers sent money to an indicted criminal, thinking he actually gave a crap about them. lol
 
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT