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House Committee on Appropriations | House Committee on Appropriations

Committee Releases FY24 Financial Services and General Government Appropriations Bill

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The Financial Services and General Government bill provides a non-defense discretionary total of $25.279 billion and a defense discretionary total of $45 million for programs under the jurisdiction of the Subcommittee. The Subcommittee’s non-defense discretionary allocation is $11.266 billion, and the House bill includes $14.013 billion that is offset by clawing back the Democrats’ wasteful spending over the last two years, including Internal Revenue Service (IRS) funds. While the allocation is cut by 58% below last year, the total spending level accounting for partisan claw-backs is $25.324 billion, which is $6.232 billion (19.75%) below the President’s Budget Request, $1.867 billion (7.0%) below the FY23 enacted level, and $581.9 million (2.25%) below the FY22 enacted level. This bill prioritizes agencies and programs that combat terrorism financing, maintain the integrity of our financial markets, spur small business growth, preserve a fair and efficient judicial system, and target opioid abuse.

 

Fiscal Year 2024 Financial Services and General Government Bill

  • Reins in wasteful Washington spending and bureaucracy by:
    • Rejecting nearly $6.232 billion for discretionary funding increases and $44 billion in mandatory funding increases within the President’s Budget Request;
    • Rescinding wasteful Democrat spending for a supercharged army of 85,000 IRS agents and their associated payroll systems;
    • Prohibiting dozens of costly regulatory actions and ensuring agencies remain focused on their core federal functions; and
    • Ensuring agencies return to pre-COVID telework policies and levels.
  • Supports economic growth and protects American investors and small businesses by:
    • Prohibiting funding for costly and heavy-handed regulations at the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), including the climate disclosure rule; and
    • Subjecting the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) to the appropriations process and replacing the CFPB director with a bipartisan, five-person commission.
  • Targets opioid abuse by:
    • Prioritizing funds for the High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas (HIDTA) to address regional drug threats including combatting fentanyl and other opioid overdoses and enhancing drug interdiction activities.
Original source can be found here

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