House Passes $9bn Claw Back Of Public Broadcasting And Foreign Aid Funds

Topline

The House voted to approve the White House’s request to scrap $9 billion in previously approved funding for foreign aid and public broadcasting early on Friday, sending the matter to President Donald Trump’s desk, after a delay caused by a clash in the narrowly divided chamber over the Epstein files issue.

Key Facts

The rescissions package, which will claw back the already-approved funding, was passed mostly along party lines with a 216-213 vote, a day after the Senate cleared it.

However, two GOP members, Reps. Brian Fitzpatrick, R-Pa., and Mike Turner, R-Ohio, voted against the measure along with all Democrats.

The legislation will now be sent to Trump’s desk, who hailed its passage on Truth Social, saying: “REPUBLICANS HAVE TRIED DOING THIS FOR 40 YEARS, AND FAILED….BUT NO MORE. THIS IS BIG!!!”

The president’s post attacked public broadcast funding, saying the $9 billion cuts include “ATROCIOUS NPR AND PUBLIC BROADCASTING, WHERE BILLIONS OF DOLLARS A YEAR WERE WASTED.”

The rescissions package will allow the Trump administration to claw back $1.1 billion in funding from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, which helps fund public broadcasters like PBS and NPR, and approximately $8 billion from foreign aid programs, including allocations to USAID.

The Senate had passed the package early on Thursday in a 51-48 vote, with two Republican Sens. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska and Susan Collins of Maine, voting against it.

Crucial Quote

After the bill’s passage, Mike Johnson tweeted: “President Trump and House Republicans promised fiscal responsibility and government efficiency. Today, we’re once again delivering on that promise…The American people will no longer be forced to fund politically biased media and more than $8 billion in outrageous expenses overseas.”

How Did The Epstein Files Controversy Impact The Legislation’s Passage?

CNN reported that the late-night vote on the rescissions package was undertaken after the GOP House leadership held talks with holdouts who were “demanding a vote on a Jeffrey Epstein-related measure.” The legislation was then held up by a debate on the floor that focused more on the Trump administration’s handling of the Epstein case rather than the clawbacks. In a bid to address the controversy and defuse tension on the matter, the Republican members on the Rules Committee adopted a nonbinding resolution calling for the “public release of certain documents, records, and communications related to the investigation of Jeffrey Epstein.” The measure calls on the DOJ to provide “documents, records and communications” surrounding the investigation into Epstein and his death within 30 days with limited redactions. It is unclear, however, if the House GOP leadership will be able to muster the necessary votes to pass the resolution.

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/siladityaray/2025/07/18/house-approves-9-billion-claw-back-of-public-broadcasting-and-foreign-aid-funds/