
President-elect Donald Trump is planning to redirect unspent Inflation Reduction Act funding to spending on infrastructure, the Daily Caller News Foundation has learned.
âPresident Trump will rapidly defeat inflation and bring down all prices by ending the Democratsâ anti-energy crusade, which will cut energy prices in half during his first 12 months in office,â Karoline Leavitt, Trump-Vance transition spokeswoman, told the DCNF in a written statement. âHe will also terminate the Green New Scam and rescind all unspent funds from the so-called âInflation Reduction Actâ and redirect them to spending on real infrastructure.â
As the Biden-Harris administration rushes to formally obligate tens of billions in IRA funding before Biden leaves office, President-elect Trump is moving forward with plans to repeal the IRA and redirect all leftover spending from Bidenâs climate law to spending on infrastructure. The incoming Trump administrationâs vow to reprogram remaining IRA funding could face legal challenges due to restrictions on reallocation within the congressional appropriations, and failure to spend as Congress directed could violate a Nixon-era budget law that forces the executive branch to spend money appropriated by Congress.
Potentially Billions In Unspent IRA Funds
The IRA, which passed on party-line votes with no Republican support, appropriated nearly $105 billion for âclimateâ spending. The Biden administration does not appear to be on track to formally obligate this massive sum before president-elect Trump takes office, which could grant Trump control over tens of billions of dollars in leftover IRA funding when he returns to the Oval Office in January.
The Biden-Harris Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) may leave the Trump administration with at least $3.5 billion in unspent IRA funds, including more than $1.5 billion in âenvironmental justiceâ grant spending, according an EPA press release from Aug. 16, which stated the agency is on track to obligate more than $38 billion of its IRA funding by Dec. 31.
âBased on the Energy and Commerce Committeeâs findings so far, I would hope Administrator Regan would not take the extraordinary step of rushing the distribution of more than $1.5 billion dollars in so-called âenvironmental justiceâ grants to obscure groups with only a vague charge to talk about environmental issues and teach other organizations how to apply for more grants,â Republican Virginia Rep. Morgan Griffith, chair of the Energy and Commerce oversight and investigations subcommittee, told the Daily Caller News Foundation in a written statement.
The EPAâs âenvironmental justiceâ grant spending under the IRA have doled out hundreds of millions of dollars to left-wing advocacy groups under the guise of environmental justice, according to extensive reporting on the agencyâs grant recipients from the DCNF.
The EPA declined to comment on the DCNFâs inquiry about whether the agency plans to announce additional grant awards and formally commit the remaining âenvironmental justiceâ IRA funds to nonprofit entities before Trump takes office.
Reviving The Presidentâs âImpoundmentâ Authority
Trump vowed to repeal Bidenâs $1.2 trillion climate law and rescind all unspent funds on the campaign trail, dubbing the IRA the âGreen New Scamâ in a speech at the New York Economic Club in September. Neither Trump nor his team have previously commented on the incoming administrationâs plan to redirect unspent IRA fundings to spending on infrastructure.
Leavittâs pledge that the president-elect will seek to reprogram all unspent funds to infrastructure spending could subject the incoming administration to litigation for violating the IRA and the 2022 Consolidated Appropriations Act â the omnibus bill that appropriated the vast majority of IRA funding â according analysis from the left-leaning Sabin Center for Climate Change Law at Columbia University Law School.
The 2022 Consolidated Appropriations Act set a 10% reprogramming limit on IRA funds, which could restrict the president-electâs authority to redirect all unspent IRA funding to spending on âreal infrastructure,â according to Sabin Center analysis.
Trump could also seek to withhold unspent IRA funds, which would directly challenge the 1974 Impoundment Control Act (ICA) that requires the executive branch to spend the entire amount of a congressional appropriation.
âWhen I return to the White House, I will do everything I can to challenge the Impoundment Control Act in court, and if necessary, get Congress to overturn it. We will overturn it,â Trump said in a campaign video vowing to revive the presidentâs authority to impound a congressional appropriation in June 2023. âReasserting the presidentâs historic Impoundment authority will also restore critical negotiating leverage with Congress to keep spending under control. Very simple. We are going to keep spending under control.â
âMr. Trump has previously suggested this statute is unconstitutional, and we believe the current Supreme Court would likely side with him on this question,â Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy, the president-electâs Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) advisors wrote in the Wall Street Journal on Nov. 20.
Russ Vought, Trumpâs pick to lead the White House Office of Management and Budget (OMB) who also helmed the office during the president-electâs first administration, argues that the ICA unconstitutionally infringes on the executiveâs authority to impound a congressional appropriation, according to several interviews he participated in this year.
âFor 200 years Presidents had the ability to not spend a congressional appropriation,â Vought told Tucker Carlson in an interview on Nov. 18. âPower of the purse means that Congress gets to set the ceiling â you canât spend without a congressional appropriation â but you werenât ever meant to be forced to spend it â and it has become a floor.â
âResuscitation of the Presidentâs impoundment authority will serve as a critical tool to curb excessive spending, reduce inflation, and dismantle the woke and weaponized bureaucracy targeting American citizens,â an introduction on the presidentâs impoundment power from the Trump-aligned Center for Renewing America published on Nov. 21 states.
Likely Democratic Resistance
Democratic lawmakers would almost certainly challenge the administrationâs authority to impound a congressional appropriation, and would likely oppose the Trump administrationâs proposal to redirect unspent IRA funds to spending on infrastructure.
âThe legal theories being pushed by Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy are as idiotic as they are dangerous,â Democratic Pennsylvania Rep. Brendan Boyle, ranking member of the House Budget Committee, wrote in a press release following the release of the Musk-Ramaswamy WSJ op-ed. âUnilaterally slashing funds that have been lawfully appropriated by the peopleâs elected representatives in Congress would be a devastating power grab that undermines our economy and puts families and communities at risk. House Democrats are ready to fight back against any illegal attempt to gut the programs that keep American families safe and help them make ends meet.â
The Trump transition team did not respond to the DCNFâs inquiry about whether âreal infrastructureâ spending includes border wall infrastructure. Trump notably diverted nearly $10 billion from the Department of Defense budget to border wall infrastructure at the southern border during his first administration.
President Biden subsequently redirected more than $2 billion of this funding back to DoD projects in June 2021. The Biden OMB claimed that âbuilding a massive wall that spans the entire southern border and costs American taxpayers billions of dollars is not a serious policy solution or responsible use of Federal funds.â
(Featured Image Media Credit: (Screen Capture/CSPAN))
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