Congress preserves most of NASA's science funding for 2026

Congress has approved a budget that largely spares NASA's science programs from deep cuts proposed by the White House. The plan allocates $24.4 billion to the agency overall, with only a 1 percent reduction in science funding to $7.25 billion. This outcome follows months of uncertainty sparked by the Trump administration's initial proposals.

In June 2025, the White House proposed a fiscal year 2026 budget that would have slashed NASA's science funding by nearly 50 percent. By July, the Trump administration instructed leaders of dozens of space science missions to prepare closure plans for their spacecraft, raising alarms in the scientific community.

Congress, however, intervened decisively. Throughout the summer and fall, lawmakers signaled their intent to protect most of NASA's science portfolio, halting preliminary shutdown efforts. On January 5, 2026, as part of the congressional conferencing process, a $24.4 billion budget for NASA emerged, limiting science funding cuts to just 1 percent, or $7.25 billion.

"This is, frankly, better than I could have expected," said Casey Dreier, chief of space policy at The Planetary Society, which opposed the initial cuts. "There’s very little to not like in this."

The budget does not reverse prior workforce reductions, including a 2025 voluntary buyout program and broader federal efficiency efforts under the Department of Government Efficiency. Dreier highlighted the wasted effort: "Those hours could have been spent running and analyzing data from these valuable missions. It created a lot of needless friction and churn at a time when NASA is being told it must remain competitive with China and other nations in space."

The House of Representatives is expected to vote on the Commerce, Justice, Science, and Related Agencies bill this week, with the Senate following next. President Trump is anticipated to sign it, effective immediately for the fiscal year that began October 1, 2025.

One notable loss is the Mars Sample Return mission, which aimed to bring Martian rocks back to Earth but faced a projected $10 billion cost and uncertain timeline. The budget states it does not support the existing program, though it allocates $110 million for a new "Mars Future Missions" initiative focused on technologies like radar and landing systems. These capabilities are deemed essential for future science and human exploration of the Moon and Mars.

Positive notes include continued funding for the DAVINCI probe to Venus, $10 million for Uranus orbiter studies, and $150 million toward the Habitable Worlds Observatory, a telescope to detect life on Earth-like exoplanets.

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Federal employees leaving a government building amid workforce cuts, with officials and charts illustrating reductions under the Trump administration's DOGE initiative.
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Trump administration accelerates federal workforce cuts as DOGE-led push reshapes agencies

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By year’s end, the civilian federal workforce is projected to fall from about 2.4 million to roughly 2.1 million employees, according to Office of Personnel Management Director Scott Kupor. The cuts—championed by budget chief Russell Vought and the White House initiative dubbed the Department of Government Efficiency, which Elon Musk led for the first four months—have targeted agencies overseeing health, the environment, education, and financial regulation while expanding immigration enforcement.

The second Trump administration has initiated sweeping reductions in federal science funding, affecting public health, climate research, and space exploration. Elon Musk, serving as a special adviser, led efforts through the Department of Government Efficiency to slash government spending. These moves mark a significant departure from decades of US investment in scientific progress.

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One year into President Donald J. Trump's second term, NASA has made significant strides in space exploration, including human spaceflight missions and preparations for the Artemis II voyage around the Moon. The agency highlights progress aligned with national space policy, building on initiatives from the president's first term. Artemis II marks the first such lunar orbit by American astronauts in over 50 years.

The U.S. Senate voted 60-40 to approve a stopgap funding bill paired with three full-year appropriations, moving to reopen the federal government after a 41-day shutdown. The package funds most operations through January 30, 2026, restores back pay and jobs for federal workers affected by reduction-in-force actions, and fully funds agriculture and legislative-branch operations as well as military construction and veterans’ programs through September 2026. It omits an extension of Affordable Care Act subsidies, a key Democratic demand, and adds a new provision letting senators sue over secret seizures of their phone data.

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A new report from watchdog group Open the Books reveals that U.S. universities are allocating up to 70% of federal science grants to administrative overhead, including DEI programs. This practice has inflated taxpayer costs and created incentives for low-quality research. The Trump administration's push to cap these rates at 15% faces legal challenges from university groups.

The U.S. House of Representatives approved a package of spending bills on Thursday to avert a partial government shutdown, though many Democrats opposed the funding for Immigration and Customs Enforcement amid concerns over its tactics. The measure now heads to the Senate for a vote ahead of a January 30 deadline. Objections stemmed from a recent fatal shooting by an ICE officer in Minneapolis and broader criticisms of the agency's enforcement practices.

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U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement has access to as much as $85 billion in funding under a law enacted in July 2025, a sharp increase that NPR reports would make it the best-funded U.S. law enforcement agency by total available resources. The increase largely reflects a $75 billion multiyear supplement added to ICE’s roughly $10 billion annual base budget as the Trump administration pursues a goal of deporting up to 1 million people each year.

 

 

 

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