Taxpayers poised to save $9 billion as deadline looms for congressional recissions

Sen. John Kennedy of Louisiana speaks to Congress.
Sen. John Kennedy of Louisiana speaks to Congress. (@JesseCoffey15 / X video screen shot)

Taxpayers are poised to save $9 billion as a deadline looms for Congress to finalize a recissions package that will withdraw cash handouts for foreign interests as well as tax money being used for the leftist agenda pursued by PBS.

The bill, adopted by the House first and now by the Senate, still requires House approval of Senate changes before it can go to President Donald Trump for his signature.

It specifically attacks spending areas that are problematic for many Americans: billions of dollars being handed out to foreign interests as well as massive subsidies for the PBS operations that critics have called leftist propaganda outlets.

Sen. John Kennedy, R-La., documented the bias as only he can:

The Senate adopted the recissions package on a 51-48 vote following a 13-hour vote-a-rama that was written to cancel $7.9 billion in handouts to foreign interests as well as about $1.1 billion intended for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, which includes PBS.

A report at Roll Call said senators restored about $400 million for PEPFAR, the president’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief.

Democrats fighting the cost-saving plan were working without one vote, as Minnesota Sen. Tina Smith went to the hospital on Wednesday feeling unwell.

The report said, “The passage vote marked a victory for the Trump administration, which is seeking to use the rescissions process to pare back federal spending and codify cuts made by the Department of Government Efficiency, known as DOGE.”

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This article was originally published by the WND News Center.

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