Understanding Trump’s proposed NASA cuts, in the larger context of the overall federal budget
U.S. debt as of June 4, 2025. Click for original.
For my entire life it has always been the same: Whenever any politician or elected official proposes any cuts to the federal budget, and most especially when those cuts are aimed at a popular government agency like NASA, the news reports in the mainstream press are uniformly hostile.
Trump’s proposal to cut NASA’s budget by 24% in 2026 has been no different. Here are just a few headlines:
- Ars Technica: Some parts of Trump’s proposed budget for NASA are literally draconian
- Sky & Telescope: Proposed NASA Budget Would Gut Space Science, Jobs
- New York Times: Scientific Discoveries, and Dreams, in the Balance
- Mother Jones: Donald Trump’s Proposed Budget Would Gut American Science
- Science: Dozens of active and planned NASA spacecraft killed in Trump budget request
- Space News: NASA budget would cancel dozens of science missions, lay off thousands
This list is only a sampling, but they are typical of almost all the reporting now and that always happens when big cuts are proposed in any government program. The spin is always the same: “These cuts are horrible, their acceptance would be the act of a barbarian, and by doing so will certainly cause the fall of civilization!”
Above all, the focus is always on the cuts themselves, and never on the larger picture.
I am not going to do that. I have reviewed in detail the proposed cuts to NASA, and am now going to take a detailed look, but will do so by considering the larger context of the overall federal budget and the need to get its spending under control.
And out of control that budget is, as indicated by the screen capture above of today’s US Debt Clock. The United States is bankrupt. If we don’t gain some control over federal spending in a very near future some very bad things are going to happen, and soon. And those bad things will likely shut down luxury items like NASA entirely, not just impose some cuts to its overall budget.
All Trump is doing is attempting a first stab at this problem. The real question is whether he has made a rational and reasonable attempt, or whether it should be revised in some manner.
This is the perspective I bring to this issue. I just wish others would do the same.
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