Wednesday, February 12, 2020

Sojo Mail - Trump's dangerous executive power

SojoMail
Sojourners was among the first to say the oft-repeated refrain that a budget is a moral document. Of course, that’s still true. Whether for a single household, an organization, or an entire nation, a budget offers a sense of the moral values of the people who create it. It shows who and what do and do not matter — what the priorities are — for the family or church or Congress or the White House.
When a president releases his annual budget proposal, there’s always a temptation to argue that it carries little weight — that since Congress holds the power of the purse, many of the president’s proposals may be non-starters for the opposing party and won’t actually go into effect. That’s why it’s helpful to view President Trump’s budget proposal for FY2021, which was released on Monday, not as a preview of what’s to come, but instead as a statement of purpose and priority — literally, a campaign document.
... It’s clear that the Trump administration responded to its party’s defeat in the 2018 midterm elections not by moderating its push to inflict harm on society’s most vulnerable, but rather by simply shifting its tactics to focus less on legislation and more on executive orders, which far more often fly under the media’s radar. The administration has been using every bit of executive authority it can justify, and then some, to make the lives of people more difficult and less secure.
E-mailForward
FacebookShare

ADVERTISEMENT

CG_Advance_WebAds_FINAL_300x250.jpg
 
Our Latest
“Every week, almost daily, I see patients who cannot afford care, can’t afford their medication."
As we debate this administration’s policies — and the defenses of it proffered by some of evangelicalism’s most well-known names — it’s worth looking at the history that brought us to this moment.
A commitment to justice or equality cannot be purely voyeuristic or touristic.
The prevailing stereotype of unpredictable and hypersexualized brown women’s bodies. 

ADVERTISEMENT

Ignatian_4129_Feb-LENT_300x250.jpg
 
From the Magazine
An excerpt from A Black Women's History of the United States.
 

ADVERTISEMENTS

The GRACE Act would set a minimum refugee admissions goal of 95,000 people each year and take away the power from the president to end the refugee program.
Twelve months. Ten people in intentional community. Eight hours of work per day. Six forms of compensation (food, housing, health insurance, loan deferral assistance, local transportation, and stipend). Three weekend retreats. One beloved community with God’s heart for justice, working in Washington, D.C. Application deadline: Feb. 15, 2020

 
DONATE SUBSCRIBE

Unsubscribe or update email preferencesUpdate your contact information

Copyright © 2019 Sojourners, All rights reserved.
Sojourners | 408 C St. NE | Washington, DC 20002
Email: sojourners@sojo.net | Tel.: 202.328.8842

No comments:

Post a Comment

Minute for Mission: National Day of Awareness & Action for Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women, Girls and Two-Spirit People

Witness, Share and Evangelize: Minute for Mission: National Day of Awareness & Ac... : May 5, 2024 Photo courtesy of Alethia Oatman Indi...