
CNA Newsroom, Jul 17, 2025 / 15:58 pm (CNA).
U.S. Senator Tim Kaine (D-VA) delivered a speech on the Senate floor on July 16 denouncing cuts to federal funding of faith-based organizations that play critical roles in refugee resettlement and international humanitarian aid.
The Rescissions Act of 2025, pushed by both President Donald Trump and congressional Republicans, proposes $9.4 billion in cuts to previously appropriated federal funding, $800 million of which supports faith-based organizations like Catholic Relief Services (CRS) as well as World Vision, an evangelical organization, the two largest faith-based organizations that help resettle legal immigrants.
The rescissions bill, which passed in the U.S. House of Representatives 214-212 on June 12 and passed in an amended form in the Senate on July 17, threatens to dismantle funding for faith-based groups, including the U.S. bishop-supported CRS, which oversees one of the largest refugee resettlement programs in the U.S.
Kaine, a Catholic and member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee who opposes the cuts, on Wednesday called them an "attack on the religious organizations so that they cannot do the work that their faith in their Creator compels them to do."
During the Senate's consideration of the measure on July 16, Kaine unsuccessfully introduced a motion to recommit the bill to the Senate Committee on Appropriations with instructions to preserve funding for faith-based organizations involved in refugee resettlement and international assistance. The motion was rejected in the Senate by a vote of 48-51.
Kaine, the former governor of Virginia, had urged the Senate to preserve funding for the faith-based groups, many of which have already laid off employees.
According to Kaine, Catholic Charities, Lutheran Social Services and the Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society have fired staff, and the Episcopal Church has closed its resettlement program completely.
World Relief has warned that the cuts undermine protections for persecuted Christians, Kaine said.
While he said he was "not surprised" that Trump had supported the funding cuts, Kaine expressed dismay at the cuts' support among Republicans, many of whom "go to churches just like me and hear sermons preached about the Good Samaritan, just like I do every Sunday."
The senator said seven of the ten organizations resettling refugees in the U.S. are faith-based, with the CRS leading efforts to integrate legal immigrants, such as Afghan allies and Congolese families, into American communities.
In his speech Wednesday, Kaine spoke about his home parish, St. Elizabeth of Hungary in Richmond, Virginia, which was founded by Italian and German immigrants after World War I.
He said those immigrants chose to honor St. Elizabeth because she took bread to the poor, a symbol of serving those in need.
Kaine's parish, which he said he has attended for 40 years, now has a large community of Congolese refugees settled by CRS.
"My church looks … different in some ways than when it was founded 100 years ago," Kaine said, "but in other ways it's exactly the same—a haven for … legal immigrants" who have "come to a place where they feel loved and cared for and safe and welcome."
He highlighted the impact of the proposed funding cuts on his parish, where Congolese families fear for relatives still in refugee camps.
"These families come to me after Mass, frightened about what these cuts mean," he said.
The Senate passed a version of the measure on July 17 incorporating an amendment that preserved $400 million to the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief. The amendment also protected some country-specific grants.
Because it was amended, the bill was sent back to the House. If Congress fails to pass the Rescissions Act by midnight on July 18, the White House must release the $9 billion in funds, including $7.9 billion in foreign aid cuts affecting faith-based organizations, to be spent as originally appropriated.