The Trump administration is planning to cut $707 million from the budget of the top federal cybersecurity agency in the United States, the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, or CISA.
As part of the budget cuts, the Administration announced that it will be axing programs focused on countering misinformation and propaganda, and offices like council management, stakeholder engagement, and international affairs. Those three offices are under CISA’s stakeholder engagement division, which leads national and international collaboration between governments, industry, and academic institutions to combat cyber threats.
The Trump administration claims that CISA’s cybersecurity mission, and specifically its work countering online political misinformation, operates more like a federal censorship arm.
“CISA was more focused on censorship than on protecting the Nation’s critical systems, and put them at risk due to poor management and inefficiency, as well as a focus on self-promotion,” the White House claimed in the fiscal 2027 budget summary. “These programs and offices were used as a key hub in the Censorship Industrial Complex to violate the First Amendment, target Americans for their protected speech, and target the President.”
That rhetoric has become all too familiar under Trump 2.0. Trump signed the order that established CISA in 2018 as a successor to a previous federal national security organization under the Department of Homeland Security.
But when CISA debunked Trump’s election fraud claims following his loss in the 2020 presidential election, the President and his allies were quick to turn on the agency. Promptly after, Trump fired CISA’s then-Director Christopher Krebs, whom he had appointed himself a few years prior.
When he took office for the second time in January 2025, Trump’s wrath fell on CISA. The agency has been in chaos over the past year, in large part due to large-scale layoffs and cuts in funding. CISA hasn’t even had a Senate-confirmed permanent director since Trump took office.
Trump and his allies specifically have a bone to pick with CISA’s online misinformation arm, which they claim disproportionately targets conservative voices in an act that amounts to censorship.
The budget cuts would come at a time of heightened cybersecurity threats to the United States. Just last month, an Iran-linked group hacked FBI Director Kash Patel’s personal email account and organized a cyberattack against medical technology company Stryker, both in retaliation for American aggression in Iran, including a strike on an elementary school that killed at least 175 people, mostly children.
The nation is also gearing up for a consequential midterm election later this year, as Democrats look to flip the House majority. The U.S. will likely go into this election with CISA’s election security programs greatly restricted.
Meanwhile, technological advancements in artificial intelligence continue to pose a growing risk to cybersecurity. Google also recently claimed that cryptography-disrupting quantum computing technology would be available by 2029.
The White House budget proposal is not final, though. It now needs to be approved by Congress, where there is a possibility that the damage to CISA could at least be somewhat reduced. Last year, the White House lobbied for a very similar dramatic budget reduction for CISA, which was ultimately scaled back through bipartisan opposition.