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Here are the free games hitting PlayStation Plus Essential in December 2024EXCLUSIVE Controversial proposal for Elon Musk's DOGE that would save billions for Americans picks up steam DOGE scores support from another top Democrat CLICK HERE: Sign up for DailyMail.com's daily U.S. politics newsletter By JON MICHAEL RAASCH, POLITICAL REPORTER ON CAPITOL HILL, FOR DAILYMAIL.COM Published: 21:17 GMT, 10 December 2024 | Updated: 21:37 GMT, 10 December 2024 e-mail 114 View comments One of the most controversial proposals from Elon Musk 's Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) is gaining support as he and lawmakers look to cut costs. President-elect Donald Trump has tapped the Tesla CEO and entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy to cut trillions of dollars in federal spending as the U.S. national debt continues to balloon to staggering new highs inflated by runaway expenditures over the few last decades. As it stands, that debt totals $36.2 trillion dollars, but Musk estimates that DOGE could cut 'at least $2 trillion' from the current White House 's $6.5 trillion budget in the near term. The next natural questions is where should these cuts will come from. Musk and Ramaswamy are reportedly considering stripping all taxpayer-funded foreign aid , which would send shock waves internationally. The United States spent an estimated $70 billion in foreign aid in fiscal year 2022 to help economic development and humanitarian causes and other interests. And America has allotted a whopping $175 billion total in foreign aid to Ukraine alone since the outbreak of its war with Russia in 2022. But the spigots spewing U.S. taxpayer dollars abroad may soon be turned off. South Carolina Republican Rep. Ralph Norman told DailyMail.com DOGE 'absolutely' should target foreign aid, though he admitted slashing funding to Israel is off the table. House Oversight Committee Chair James Comer, R-Ky., similarly told DailyMail.com that 'foreign aid for every country except Israel' should be cut. Elon Musk met with lawmakers on Capitol Hill last week to speak about DOGE initiatives Former Texas Rep. Ron Paul asked to help DOGE with its cost cutting efforts, Musk agreed that he could help advise the team A search and rescue operation is underway after a Russian missile strike, Zaporizhzhia, southeastern Ukraine on December 10, 2024. Paul and Musk have both called for eliminating foreign aid to countries like Ukraine and elsewhere to help achieve DOGE's cost saving goals 'Here’s an easy one for @DOGE !' three-time presidential candidate and former lawmaker Ron Paul posted on X recently. 'Eliminate foreign aid!' 'It’s taking money from the poor and middle class in the US and giving it to the rich in poor countries - with a cut to the facilitators in between! Americans don’t want their government to borrow more money to spend on foreign aid,' the post continued. 'Besides, it is the immoral transfer of wealth and is unconstitutional.' Musk has posted about the libertarian: 'Would be great to have Ron Paul as part of the Department of Government Efficiency!' Democrats, however, bristle at DOGE's sweeping mandate, and the thought of unraveling expenditures approved by Congress. 'Well, I think $2 trillion is an unrealistic figure,' Rep. Steny Hoyer, D-Md., told DailyMail.com of DOGE's objective. At 85-years-old Hoyer is one of the longest serving congressmen first joined the House in 1981. During that year the national debt sat at $988 billion, a modest number compared to today's jaw-dropping $36 trillion. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky (C) posing for a picture with servicemen holding a Ukrainian flag. The U.S. has sent nearly $200 billion dollars to the country in recent years President Joe Biden has repeatedly urged Congress to pass additional funding for Ukraine. He is reportedly planning on pushing for an additional $1 billion to the country soon The veteran Maryland Democrat was not optimistic that the Musk-led initiative would create meaningful cuts, and he seemed opposed to lessening the scope of government. Hoyer said he would urge DOGE only to cut things 'that can be affected without adversely affecting the services that people need and that the Congress has voted for.' But most lawmakers were keen on other ways to whittle down waste too. 'So the whole key to me is pick the low hanging fruit, the DEI things comes to mind, transgender surgeries, all that kind of things,' Norman floated as quick DOGE targets. 'The Farm Bill's SNAP, look at the waste that's going there,' he added about the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, commonly referred to as food stamps. The food subsidy program costed the U.S. roughly $115 billion in 2023, per federal data. 'Every government agency has created new grant programs,' Comer said. 'We've got all this money and energy spending on solar and wind and energy initiatives in the green New Deal that people don't think are working out.' 'We spent all this money to run broadband, yet nobody's hooked on to the broadband,' he added. 'The list goes on and on and on of money that has just been absolutely wasted, all this money spent on charging stations, and yet no charging stations were built.' He said funding could be taken from agency's whose usefulness has also been diminished over time, like the United States Postal Service. Rep. Rich McCormick, R-Ga., a physician, suggested that DOGE look into cutting Medicare and Medicaid fraud, which he says would cut hundreds of billions of dollars in government spending over the next 10 years. The U.S. has recently approved Ukraine to use its advanced HIMARS weapons system to attack deep in Russian territory Republicans were against slashing foreign aid funding for Israel despite being open to cutting the funding for Ukraine and other nations Medicaid fraud $413 billion in the next 10 years,' he said, arguing that reforms in this sector would make far more meaningful spending cuts than suspending foreign aid payments. 'At least with foreign investment you don't end up isolationist,' he told DailyMail.com. 'Every isolationist country in history has gone the way of the dodo,' he said referring to the extinct bird. The Republican claimed that adding income verification for the federal health programs would immediately cut cost. 'If you want to talk about waste, fraud and abuse on the way we do claims ... we spent 25 percent of every dollar spent on health care, actually it's more than that now, on administrative costs.' 'We can modify this without a lot of pain,' he said with a smile. Politics Elon Musk Israel Share or comment on this article: Controversial proposal for Elon Musk's DOGE that would save billions for Americans picks up steam e-mail Add commentIs he a hero? A killer? Both? About the same time the #FreeLuigi memes featuring the mustachioed plumber from “Super Mario Brothers” mushroomed online, commenters shared memes showing Tony Soprano pronouncing Luigi Mangione , the man charged with murdering the UnitedHealthcare CEO in Manhattan , a hero. There were posts lionizing Mangione’s physique and appearance, the ones speculating about who could play him on “Saturday Night Live,” and the ones denouncing and even threatening people at a Pennsylvania McDonald’s for spotting him and calling police. It was all too much for Pennsylvania's governor, a rising Democrat who was nearly the vice presidential nominee this year. Josh Shapiro — dealing with a case somewhere else that happened to land in his lap — decried what he saw as growing support for “vigilante justice.” The curious case of Brian Thompson and Luigi Mangione captivated and polarized a media-saturated nation. It also offers a glimpse into how, in a connected world, so many different aspects of modern American life can be surreally linked — from public violence to politics, from health care to humor (or attempts at it) . It summons a question, too: How can so many people consider someone a hero when the rules that govern American society — the laws — are treating him as the complete opposite? Luigi Mangione, a suspect in the fatal shooting of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson, on Monday at the police station in Altoona, Pa. Writings found in Mangione's possession hinted at a vague hatred of corporate greed and an expression of anger toward “parasitic” health insurance companies. Bullets recovered from the crime scene had the words “deny,” “defend” and “depose,” reflecting words used by insurance industry critics, written on them. A number of online posts combine an apparent disdain for health insurers — with no mention of the loss of life. “He took action against private health insurance corporations is what he did. he was a brave italian martyr. in this house, luigi mangione is a hero, end of story!” one anonymous person said in a post on X that has nearly 2 million views. On Monday, Shapiro took issue with comments like those. It was an extraordinary moment that he tumbled into simply because Mangione was apprehended in Pennsylvania. Shapiro's comments — pointed, impassioned and, inevitably, political — yanked the conversation unfolding on so many people's phone screens into real life. “We do not kill people in cold blood to resolve policy differences or express a viewpoint,” the governor said. “In a civil society, we are all less safe when ideologues engage in vigilante justice.” But to hear some of his fellow citizens tell it, that's not the case at all. Like Bonnie and Clyde, John Dillinger, D.B. Cooper and other notorious names from the American past, Mangione is being cast as someone to admire. Luigi Nicholas Mangione is escorted into Blair County Courthouse on Tuesday in Hollidaysburg, Pa. Regina Bateson, an assistant political science professor at the University of Colorado at Boulder, has studied vigilantism, the term to which Shapiro alluded. She doesn’t see this case as a good fit for the word, she says, because the victim wasn’t linked to any specific crime or offense. As she sees it, it's more akin to domestic terrorism. But Bateson views the threats against election workers , prosecutors and judges ticking up — plus the assassination attempts against President-elect Donald Trump this past summer — as possible signs that personal grievances or political agendas could erupt. “Americans are voicing more support for — or at least understanding of — political violence,” she said. Shapiro praised the police and the people of Blair County, who abided by a 9/11-era dictum of seeing something and saying something. The commenters have Mangione wrong, the governor said: “Hear me on this: He is no hero. The real hero in this story is the person who called 911 at McDonald’s this morning." A person demonstrates Monday near the McDonald's restaurant in Altoona, Pennsylvania, where police earlier in the day arrested Luigi Nicholas Mangione, 26, in the Dec. 4 killing of UnitedHealthcare's CEO in Manhattan. Even shy of supporting violence, there are many instances of people who vent over how health insurers deny claims. Tim Anderson's wife, Mary, dealt with UnitedHealthcare coverage denials before she died from Lou Gehrig’s disease in 2022. “The business model for insurance is don’t pay,” Anderson, 67, of Centerville, Ohio, told The Associated Press . The discourse around the killing and Mangione is more than just memes. Conversations about the interconnectedness of various parts of American life are unfolding online as well. One Reddit user said he was banned for three days for supporting Kyle Rittenhouse, who was acquitted after testifying he acted in self-defense when he fatally shot two people in 2020 during protests. “Do you think people are getting banned for supporting Luigi?” the poster wondered. The comments cover a lot of ground. They include people saying the UnitedHealthcare slaying isn't a “right or left issue" and wondering what it would take to get knocked off the platform. “You probably just have to cross the line over into promoting violence,” one commenter wrote. “Not just laughing about how you don’t care about this guy.” Luigi Mangione is taken into the Blair County Courthouse on Tuesday in Hollidaysburg, Pa. Memes and online posts in support of the 26-year-old man, who's charged with killing UnitedHealthcare's CEO, have mushroomed online. Get the latest in local public safety news with this weekly email.
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