FBI director Kash Patel testifies during a House Committee on Appropriations, Subcommittee on Commerce, Justice, Science, and Related Agencies budget hearing on the Fiscal Year 2026 Request for the Federal Bureau of Investigation, on Capitol Hill, Wednesday, May 7, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Rod Lamkey, Jr.)
FBI director says bureau needs more funding than what Trump administration budget proposal calls for
WASHINGTON (AP) 鈥 FBI Director Kash Patel broke with the Trump administration Wednesday over a budget proposal that would dramatically slash funding for the bureau, telling lawmakers, 鈥淲e need more than what has been proposed.鈥
FBI director Kash Patel testifies during a House Committee on Appropriations, Subcommittee on Commerce, Justice, Science, and Related Agencies budget hearing on the Fiscal Year 2026 Request for the Federal Bureau of Investigation, on Capitol Hill, Wednesday, May 7, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Rod Lamkey, Jr.)
WASHINGTON (AP) 鈥 FBI Director Kash Patel broke with the Trump administration Wednesday over a budget proposal that would dramatically slash funding for the bureau, telling lawmakers, 鈥淲e need more than what has been proposed.鈥
calls for a funding cut of more than $500 million for the FBI as part of what the White House said was a desire to 鈥渞eform and streamline鈥 the bureau and reduce 鈥渘on-law enforcement missions that do not align鈥 with the priorities of President Donald Trump. Patel warned that such a cut would be harmful for the FBI as it reorients priorities to focus on violent crime.
Asked to specify at a House Appropriations subcommittee which positions would need to be cut if the funding reduction was implemented, Patel replied: 鈥淎t this time, we have not looked at who to cut. We are focusing our energies on how not to have them cut by coming in here and highlighting to you that we can鈥檛 do the mission on those 2011 budget levels.鈥
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Rep. Rosa DeLauro, a Connecticut Democrat, pressed Patel for details, saying, 鈥淭his is your budget. You have to have some idea of what you want to fund or not fund, or where you can cut or not cut, and provide that information鈥 to the Office of Management and Budget.
鈥淭hat’s the proposed budget 鈥 not by the FBI,鈥 Patel replied. 鈥淭he proposed budget that I put forward is to cover us for for $11.1 billion, which would not have us cut any positions.鈥
Patel also defended the FBI’s plan to from the Washington area to cities around the country, one of the first initiatives he revealed upon being sworn in as director in February.
鈥淧art of the process is not just putting people out sporadically, throwing darts on the map. What we鈥檝e done is we鈥檝e taken a process with the (career employees) at the FBI and said, 鈥榃here are some of the most violent crime places in America?鈥欌 Patel said.
Patel also clashed during one contentious exchange with Democratic Rep. Madeleine Dean of Pennsylvania, against Trump in his first term.
She asserted that the FBI had become 鈥渨eaponized鈥 under Patel and confronted him over a book he had authored, saying a list of Trump adversaries he included in it amounted to an 鈥渆nemies list” and was being used by Trump as a 鈥渂lueprint for revenge.鈥
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Patel replied that he was the one who had been 鈥渢argeted by a weaponized FBI,” presumably referring to the fact that he was among the people as part of media leak investigations when he was a staffer on the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence conducting an investigation into Russian election interference.
鈥淵ou should read the book because there鈥檚 no enemies list (in) that book,鈥 Patel continued. “There are people that violated their constitutional obligations and their duties to the American people, and they were rightly called out. And you should give that book to every one of your constituents so they can read” about it.