Politics | Republican Study Committee Righties to Unveil $2.5T in Spending Cuts Proposal would cut or drastically shrink more than 50 programs By Kevin Spak Posted Jan 20, 2011 11:17 AM CST Copied Sen. Jim DeMint, R-S.C., talks with reporters near the Senate floor, on Capitol Hill in Washington Wednesday, Dec. 22, 2010, as they consider the New START Treaty. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon) House Republicans are about to unveil a massive spending reduction bill that would slash $2.5 trillion in spending over the next 10 years. Rep. Jim Jordan, chair of the Republican Study Committee, will unveil his “Spending Reduction Act” at a Heritage Foundation speech today, the Daily Caller reports. The bill would eliminate or drastically shrink more than 50 government programs, and mandate that non-defense discretionary spending be dialed down to 2006 levels. The programs being cut represent a relatively modest savings—it’s the discretionary spending pullback that accounts for the lion’s share--$2.3 trillion—of the anticipated haul. The proposal would also cut the federal workforce by 15% and freeze federal pay for five years. The bill is much more ambitious than the cuts proposed by the GOP’s “Pledge to America,” though it does include those recommendations in its first year. Jim DeMint will introduce a version of the bill in the Senate as well. Read These Next North Carolina shooting suspect once walked the red carpet. The gunman who killed 4 at a Michigan church was an ex-marine. 'We heard a big bang,' says churchgoer in Michigan Skydivers leap from plane 2 minutes before fatal crash. Report an error