The Latest: Mulvaney: He would oppose budget if a lawmaker

dan-coats-2

Director of National Intelligence Dan Coats speaks at a Senate Select Committee on Intelligence hearing on worldwide threats, Tuesday, Feb. 13, 2018, in Washington. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik)

dan-coats-2

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Latest on President Donald Trump’s proposed budget (all times local):

12:55 p.m.

President Donald Trump’s own budget director says that if he were still a member of Congress he probably wouldn’t vote for the very budget plan he hawked Tuesday to the Senate Budget Committee.

Office of Management and Budget Director Mick Mulvaney told the panel that he “probably would have found enough shortcomings in this to vote against it.”

But Mulvaney, a deficit hawk during three terms as a tea party congressman from South Carolina, said his job now is to represent Trump, who promises to avoid cuts to retirement benefits like Social Security.

Mulvaney drafted Monday’s $4.4 trillion budget plan, which would cut safety net programs while greatly boosting military spending while putting the government on track to run trillion-dollar deficits for the next few years

___

12:16 a.m.

President Donald Trump’s budget for the upcoming fiscal year calls for steep cuts to America’s social safety net and mounting spending on the military.

That combination in the $4.4 trillion budget plan submitted Monday to Congress steps far back from Trump’s promises last year to balance the federal budget. If enacted, his plan would establish annual $1 trillion-plus deficits, a major reversal for Republicans who objected to increased spending during the Obama administration.

Trump’s budget revives his calls for big cuts to domestic programs that benefit the poor and middle class, such as food stamps, housing subsidies and student loans. Retirement benefits would remain mostly untouched, as Trump has pledged, though Medicare providers would absorb about $500 billion in cuts — a nearly 6 percent reduction.