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Every. Single. One.
The budget betrayal didn't begin during the final budget of Trump's presidency. In an era when Congress barely legislates and surrenders all the power to the other two branches, the annual budget bills encompass every priority under the sun. Sadly, every single budget bill that Trump signed in the Oval Office was a Democratic bill. In fact, to my knowledge, every budget bill Trump has signed has actually garnered more Democratic support than Republican support.
When Congress sent Trump a budget bill in March 2018 that contained nearly every Democratic priority and voted on the 2,000+-page bill within hours of it being written, Trump promised, "I will never sign another bill like this again."
Imagine how different this country would look had this promise been fulfilled. Sadly, there has never been a budget bill signed by this president that has not included all these policy and process flaws each and every time.
If you want to know why the border numbers are higher, the interior immigration enforcement numbers lower, the debt and dependency greater, and liberty less now than any time during the Obama presidency, it's all in these budget bills.
Here is a list of the voting record of each one:
H.R. 244 (Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2017)
H.R. 601 (2017 blank check debt limit increase)
TARGET Act (FY 2018 omnibus)
FY 2019 "Cromnibus"
2018 Trillion-dollar farm bill (read more here)
FY 2019 Homeland Security omnibus bill that ended shutdown without funding border wall
Debt ceiling increase and busting of budget caps
FY 2020 continuing resolution
5,593-page FY 2021 omnibus with COVID bailout for states and education cartel
Thus, we see that every single major piece of legislation that has affected our country garnered more support from Democrats, often unanimous, and most often with support from their leadership. Yet Trump not only signed each of them, but Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin negotiated them from the get-go. Republicans had control of both houses of Congress for the first two years and control of the Senate along with the White House for all four years. This was an alliance between Trump's liberal cabinet members, Democrat leadership, and RINOs against conservatives every single time. This swamp was refilled rather than drained.
It's important to remember that the Republican opposition to most of these bills would have been even stronger had Trump himself opposed them. However, many more members supported them because his administration negotiated them before Trump, in some cases, made last-minute protestations against the bill after hearing complaints from conservatives.
Daniel Horowitz
Blaze Podcast Host