FY 2011 Budget Materials

Facts & Figures

Senator Kerry’s Fact Sheet on House Cuts to Foreign Assistance
H.R. 1: Disproportionate Cuts to International Affairs Budget
How the International Affairs Budget promotes national security
How the International Affairs Budget promotes America’s economy
Myths and Facts About the International Affairs Budget
Fact Sheet on the FY11 International Affairs Budget Request
USGLC Analysis on the FY11 International Affairs Budget Request
FY11 International Affairs Budget Request – Account by Account Summary

Congressional Letters

General Petraeus’s Letter to Senator Graham Supporting International Affairs Funding (March 21, 2011)
U.S. Rep. Joe Courtney’s Dear Colleague Letter to Congress (March 17, 2011)
Foreign Policy Organizations’ Letter to House Appropriations Chairman Rogers (February 16, 2011)
U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and Catholic Relief Services Letter House Members (February 14, 2011)
U.S. Chamber of Commerce Letter to House on a Full Year CR (Feb, 2011)
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s Letter to Appropriations Committee Chairman Rogers (February 14, 2011)
USGLC’s Business Letter to Congress (June 2010)
House Foreign Affairs Committee leaders letter to Appropriations Committee Chairman Obey (May 21, 2010)
Senate Letter to Appropriators (May 14, 2010)
U.S. Chamber of Commerce Letter to the Senate (May 2010)
All former Secretaries of State’s letter to Congress (April 27, 2010)
Secretary of Defense Bob Gates’ letter to Budget Committee Chairman Conrad (April 21, 2010)
New Democrats Coalition Letter to Budget Committee Chairman Spratt (April 20, 2010)
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s letter to Budget Committee Chairman Conrad (April 20, 2010)
Senate Letter to the Budget Committee Chairman Conrad and Ranking Member Gregg (April 16, 2010)
Blue Dog Coalition Letter to Budget Committee Chairman Spratt and Speaker Pelosi (April 15, 2010)
Congressional Progressive Caucus Letter to Budget Committee Chairman Spratt (April 6, 2010)
House Democratic Freshmen Letter to Budget Committee Chairman Spratt (March 29, 2010)
House Foreign Relations Committee Letter to Speaker Pelosi (March 12, 2010)
House Budget Committee Letter to Budget Committee Chairman Spratt (March 11, 2010)
USGLC Military Leaders Letter to Congress (March 10, 2010)
Congressional Black Caucus Letter to Budget Committee Chairman Spratt (March 8, 2010)
Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Mike Mullen’s letters to Speaker Pelosi and Majority Leader Reid (May 21, 2010)
U.S. Chamber of Commerce Letter in support of the International Affairs Budget (November 10, 2009)
Bi-partisan Letter to President Obama - signed by 247 Members of Congress (December 7, 2009)

USGLC Statements

USGLC Press Release on FY11 Spending Agreement (April 2011)
House FY11 Allocation: Disproportionate Cut to International Affairs Budget (March 2011)
USGLC Press Release on House Appropriations FY11 Mark (February 2011)
USGLC Press Release on Senate Budget Committee Mark (April 2010)
USGLC Press Release on President Obama’s FY11 Request (February 2010)

FY 2011 Timeline

February 1, 2010 — President Obama submits his FY11 budget request, including $58.8 billion for the International Affairs Budget.
April 21, 2010 — Senate Budget Committee passes its 2011 budget resolution, which cuts the International Affairs Budget by $4 billion from the request level.
June 30, 2010 — the House Appropriations State-Foreign Operations Subcommittee marks up its FY 2011 spending bill, providing $54.9 billion for the International Affairs Budget.
July 15, 2010 — the Senate Appropriations Committee adopts its 302(b) appropriations allocations, allocating $56.2 billion for the International Affairs Budget.
July 20, 2010 — the House Appropriations Committee adopts its 302(b) appropriations allocations, including $56.1 billion for the International Affairs Budget.
July 29, 2010 — Senate Appropriations Committee approves its State-Foreign Operations bill, which provides a total of $56.2 billion for the International Affairs Budget.
September 29, 2010 — the House passes a Continuing Resolution funding the federal government at FY10 base levels, including the International Affairs Budget at $51.1 billion. The CR extends to December 3.
September 30, 2010 — the House passes a matching Continuing Resolution.
December 1, 2010 — the House passes legislation extending the Continuing Resolution until December 18.
December 2, 2010 — the Senate passes legislation extending the Continuing Resolution until December 18.
December 18, 2010 — the House and Senate pass legislation extending the Continuing Resolution until December 21.
December 21, 2010 — the House and Senate pass a Continuing Resolution, which funds the International Affairs Budget at $52.9 billion, until March 4.
February 19, 2011the House passes HR 1, a full-year Continuing Resolution, which funds the International Affairs Budget at $45.9 billion and cut $102 billion from the President’s request.
March 2, 2011 – President Obama signs a two-week Continuing Resolution, containing $4 billion in cuts, extending funding for the federal government until March 18.
March 9, 2011 – HR 1 and Senate Democrats’ full-year spending package, which funded the International Affairs Budget at $52.3 billion and cut $29 billion from the President’s request, both fail in the Senate.
March 18, 2011 – President Obama signs a three-week Continuing Resolution, containing $6 billion in cuts extending funding for the federal government until April 8. The International Affairs Budget is reduced by $17 million when funding for the International Fund for Ireland is eliminated.
April 8, 2011 – The White House and Congressional negotiators reach agreement on a spending level for the rest of FY11, reducing spending by $38.5 billion, and a one-week Continuing Resolution, containing $6 billion in cuts, is passed by the House and Senate to give appropriators time to finalize the spending agreement. The International Affairs Budget is reduced to $50.1 billion.
April 14, 2011 – HR 1473, the full-year spending agreement, is passed by both the House (260-167) and Senate (81-19).

Votes, Amendments & Legislation

• H.R. 1473 – The final FY11 spending agreement (H.R. 1473) cut $38.5 billion from FY10 spending levels, including $6.5 billion from the International Affairs Budget. The funding level for the International Affairs Budget, $50.1 billion, is an 11.4% cut from FY10 enacted levels and 14.7% from the President’s FY11 request. The Senate and the House both passed H.R. 1473 on April 14.

• H.R. 1 – The House passed on February 19 an FY11 Continuing Resolution (H.R. 1) that funds the International Affairs Budget at $45.9 billion, 19% below FY10 enacted levels and 22% below the President’s FY11 request. On March 9, the Senate rejected H.R. 1 by a vote of 44-56.

• S. Amdt. To H.R. 1 – Senate Democrats proposed an alternative budget to the House-passed H.R. 1, which funded the International Affairs Budget at a level of $52.3 billion, 7% below FY10 enacted levels. On March 9, the Senate rejected the alternative budget by a vote of 42-58.

Hearings & Statements

U.S. Senator John Kerry’s Statement for the Record on Cuts to the International Affairs Budget in the FY11 Continuing Resolution (March 11, 2001)
Excerpts from Senate & House Committee Hearings on the FY11 International Affairs Budget
Statements by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on the International Affairs Budget
Statement on markup of House FY11 State-Foreign Operations bill by Subcommittee Chairwoman Nita Lowey
Statement on markup of House FY11 State-Foreign Operations bill by Subcommittee Ranking Member Kay Granger
Visit the “On the Record” section of USGLC’s Budget Center for more quotes and documents from members of Congress.

 

Past Budget Resources:
FY 2009 | FY 2010 | FY 2011 | FY 2012

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