Magaziner Says Trump is Trying to Remake the Federal Government

The congressman spoke before the White House rescinded a controversial freeze on federal loans and grants

Magaziner speaking with reporters in his Warwick office.
Magaziner speaking with reporters in his Warwick office.
Ian Donnis / The Public’s Radio
Share
Magaziner speaking with reporters in his Warwick office.
Magaziner speaking with reporters in his Warwick office.
Ian Donnis / The Public’s Radio
Magaziner Says Trump is Trying to Remake the Federal Government
Copy

The Trump administration’s freeze on trillions of dollars in federal grants and loans — which was rescinded Wednesday after a broad backlash — shows how the White House is intent on remaking the federal government, according to U.S. Rep. Seth Magaziner.

During a late-morning news conference in his Warwick office, Magaziner spoke before the federal freeze was lifted. He said it had the potential to devastate low- and moderate-income Rhode Islanders.

“This isn’t just political games and it’s not just government employees who are going to be impacted,” Magaziner said. “Your utility bills are going to go up, your healthcare bills are going to go up, your cost of putting kids in child care are going to go up, if this federal funding is cut off.”

Magaziner, a Democrat, said the freeze on previously allocated money was blatantly illegal “since the Constitution gives Congress the power of the purse,” and he said it offered a window on the intention of the Trump administration.

“This is what Donald Trump and the Project 2025 authors have been planning for years and they’re not just going to roll over and give up,” the Second District representative said.

This story was reported by The Public’s Radio. You can read the entire story here.

Ruling affirms state law that limits open-carry permits to those who can show a specific need
Meg Disanto, 42-year-old Providence resident, says the bridge traffic got so bad that she decided to have her kids change schools
Pope recognizes first miracle of his papacy, crediting prayers to a 19th-century Spanish priest for reviving an infant at a Pawtucket hospital
Illumina genomic sequencers were used widely by federal agencies and grantees, including URI researchers
The East Bay senator missed the mark when she took a shot at preserving a controversial assault weapons ban bill. But she hit on something else