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The Constitution and the federal budget process | Constitution Center
The state of the federal budget will be a hot topic of discussion as the new Trump administration and a Republican-controlled Congress set spending priorities in a contentious Washington environment. Here's a brief look at the constitutional roots of this process.
constitutioncenter.org
In 1974, Congress confronted some of these growing presidential budgetary powers when it passed the Congressional Budget and Impoundment Control Act, over a veto issued by President Richard Nixon. Nixon had refused to spend money allocated by Congress, citing inflation fears, using an executive power called impoundment. And as a presidential candidate in 1972, Nixon also demanded that the President be allowed by Congress to cut federal spending as needed, to control deficits.
Congress re-established some of its budgetary powers by creating the Congressional Budget Office to gather its own budget-research information and by adding standing committees in the House and Senate to handle budget matters. It also greatly curtailed the President’s budget impoundment powers, which some saw as a de facto veto of congressional actions. The 1974 act also put in place important procedural measures that allowed Congress to better coordinate the budget process.
So today, the Congress and the President share budget responsibilities, under a very general mandate from the Constitution. The President proposes annual budget guidelines. The proposed budget from the President is considered and amended in many cases by House and Senate committees. At some point, a group of House and Senate members meets to work out differences between these appropriations bills. And then the President signs the individual bills, or the one bill that includes the entire budget. If not all the bills are signed by October 1, Congress can pass a continuing

The Impoundment Control Act of 1974
Update: For GAO’s most recent testimony on the Impoundment Control Act, visit Testimony before the House Committee on the Budget—Proposals to...