Democratic Party - Democratic National Committee

03/21/2024 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 03/21/2024 14:35

Even Republicans Think Trump and House GOP’s MAGA Budget Is Too Extreme Arrow

In response to Donald Trump's MAGA allies in Congress pushing an extreme budget blueprint based on Trump's unpopular agenda, DNC Rapid Response Director Alex Floyd released the following statement:

"Donald Trump's MAGA minions in the House GOP are following Trump's lead by proposing seemingly the most extreme and overwhelmingly unpopular proposals they could think of - even Republican voters think they've gone too far. Their blueprint would rip away basic freedoms, threaten Americans' pocketbooks and health care, and make our country less safe - and voters across the board want nothing to do with it. Americans continue to make it clear that they want elected officials to protect their hard-earned benefits and safeguard their basic rights, but Trump and MAGA Republicans refuse to listen. Maybe Trump and the GOP will finally get the message this November when voters once again reject their extreme and out-of-touch MAGA agenda."

The Republican Study Committee's budget mirrors Donald Trump's efforts to cut Social Security and Medicare and make Trump's tax giveaways to the ultra-wealthy and big corporations permanent - all of which is overwhelmingly unpopular with the American people.

Bloomberg: "Republicans Call for Retirement Age Hike in Clash With Biden"

Bloomberg: "The conservative Republican Study Committee is out with a 2025 budget proposal to extend individual and corporate breaks from the 2017 Trump' tax law."

Forbes: "Trump Floats 'Cutting' Spending On Entitlements Like Social Security And Medicare"

Washington Post: "Each of [Trump's] White House budget proposals included cuts to Social Security and Medicare programs."

Fox News: "Fox News Poll: 71% choose funding Social Security, Medicare over budget cuts"

Sahil Kapur, NBC News: "Digging deeper into this @FoxNews finding. Support for funding entitlements like Social Security & Medicare over reducing deficits is overwhelming with the GOP base:

Republicans 59-38%

Trump voters 59-37%

Conservatives 60-36%

Rural voters 70-26%

White non-college voters 73%-24%"

CNN: "Nearly 67 million Americans have received monthly Social Security benefits this year, and more than 66 million people are enrolled in Medicare. Polling shows little support for major changes to the programs themselves to help shore up their finances.

"A March CNN/SSRS poll of Republicans and Republican-leaning independents, for instance, found that 59% said it was 'essential' that the GOP nominee for president 'pledges to maintain Social Security and Medicare as they are.'"

Associated Press: "Most oppose Social Security, Medicare cuts: AP-NORC poll"

Axios: "Nearly 9 in 10 Americans say they oppose reducing spending on Social Security or Medicare, according to new polling from our Axios-Ipsos Two Americas Index."

Politico: "On Tax Day, Trump tax cuts remain deeply unpopular"

The RSC's budget endorses a near-total nationwide abortion ban that would threaten access to IVF across the country, as well as a bill that would ban medication abortion.

Rolling Stone: "House Republicans Endorse National Abortion Ban"

The Hill: "The budget also backs legislation that would put restrictions on abortion, which could threaten in vitro fertilization (IVF)."

Joseph Zeballos-Roig, Semafor: "The House GOP Study Committee (largest House GOP bloc) released a budget endorsing the Life at Conception Act, which would provide 14th amendment legal protections at every stage of life. Amounts to near-total ban on abortions with no IVF exceptions"

Matthew Yglesias, Bloomberg: "In case anyone is still covering the IVF question, today's new Republican Study Committee budget specifically endorses the idea that embryos have the full legal rights of persons under the 14th Amendment."

Yglesias: "They're also backing a bill to ban mifepristone (again, something you could achieve through judicial or executive branch action as well)"

HuffPost: "Donald Trump Has Deep Ties To Anti-IVF Movement"

ABC News: "Americans continue to support IVF and abortion access"

"The vast majority of registered voters, 80 percent, think IVF should be legal."

Navigator Research: "Large majorities say reproductive care like birth control pills and IVF should be made easier to access, including majorities of Republicans. … Americans across party lines also say access to fertility planning like IVF should be easier to access, including 72 percent of Democrats, 59 percent of independents, and 53 percent of Republicans."

USA Today: "Americans overwhelmingly oppose the next goal of many anti-abortion activists, to enact a federal law banning abortion nationwide. By 80%-14%, those surveyed opposed that idea, including 65% of Republicans and 83% of independents."

Axios: "Most Americans support abortion access one year after Roe v. Wade: poll"

CNN: "A 64% majority of US adults say they disapprove of last year's Supreme Court ruling that women do not have a constitutional right to an abortion, with half strongly disapproving - an assessment that's almost entirely unchanged from CNN's poll last July in the immediate wake of the decision."

As Trump is threatening to repeal the Affordable Care Act, the RSC's proposed budget would gut the ACA and its protections for over 100 million Americans with preexisting conditions.

Axios: "RSC budget revives conservative health priorities"

"The health care section … calls for killing the Inflation Reduction Act and its drug price provisions. … It would remove many of the Affordable Care Act's protections for pre-existing conditions."

Daily Beast: "Trump Revives Plan to Dismantle Obamacare if Elected in 2024"

Axios: "The ACA's protections for people with pre-existing conditions have proved especially popular, with 79% of Americans - including 66% of Republicans - saying in 2020 that they did not want the Supreme Court to overturn those protections."

NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist Poll: "Thirteen years after the Affordable Care Act was signed into law, more than eight in ten Americans (83%) either agree or strongly agree that all Americans have a basic right to healthcare coverage."

Bryan Bennett, Navigator Research: "Per our October @NavigatorSurvey research, repealing the ACA (and January 6) remain the top concerns about Trump's first term as president"

Washington Post: "What's clear is that an effort to 'terminate' Obamacare is not something Americans are pining for. Not only were the GOP's efforts to repeal and replace Obamacare during Trump's term historically unpopular, but the law also appears to have gotten more popular since then. … And when politicians talk of ending health insurance for tens of millions of Americans, dropping coverage of preexisting conditions and cutting Obamacare's Medicaid funding, things get even dicier."

The Hill: "Majority of Americans don't want preexisting condition protections eliminated: poll"

"Even among Republicans, 66 percent of respondents said they did not want to see the preexisting condition protections overturned. Overall, the poll showed 79 percent of respondents do not want the court to cancel coverage protections for Americans with preexisting conditions."

KFF Poll: "Majorities of Democrats, Republicans, and independents say it is 'very important' to continue each of [the Affordable Care Act's] protections for people with pre-existing conditions."

The RSC budget would make it easier for dangerous people to get their hands on guns by gutting the "red flag" provisions of the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act, even though voters overwhelmingly support commonsense gun safety reform.

Daily Caller: "The RSC supports defunding the 'red flag' provisions from the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act, according to the budget proposal."

Fox News: "Fox News Poll: Voters favor gun limits over arming citizens to reduce gun violence"

Pew Research: "Other gun policy proposals, including banning high-capacity magazines (66%) and banning assault-style weapons (64%), continue to draw majority support."

Morning Consult: "Voters Maintain Strong, Bipartisan Support for Banning Assault Weapons After Lewiston"

The Hill: "Most Americans say they would support stricter gun control laws: poll"