Trump Reverses $187M in Antiterror Cuts to NYPD, Other Agencies

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security said it would restore funds to the NYPD, FDNY and other New York state agencies that had faced antiterrorism cuts.
Oct. 3, 2025
4 min read

What to know

  • President Donald Trump reversed $187 million in Homeland Security anti-terror funding cuts to New York law enforcement after bipartisan backlash and legal challenges.

  • The restored funds support NYPD, FDNY and Port Authority counterterrorism operations, including bomb squads, patrols, surveillance and training.

  • Democrats accused Trump of politically motivated retaliation against blue states, while some Republicans thanked him for stepping in.

President Trump bowed to pressure Friday and restored $187M in antiterrorism funding cuts to New York law enforcement, amid widespread outrage from both sides of the political aisle.

The Department of Homeland Security said it would restore the funding to the NYPD, FDNY, Port Authority and other New York state agencies that were earlier slashed.

“We are … announcing full funding of (Homeland Security) grants to effectively counter and combat security threats within the Empire State,” the agency said in a statement that didn’t explain why the cuts were made in the first place.

The flip-flop came after Gov. Hochul and lawmakers from both parties demanded the White House reverse the planned cuts, which came as Trump appears to be targeting Democratic states for political retaliation amid a partisan standoff and a government shutdown.

Trump claimed he did not approve the massive cuts before DHS officials notified state and city law enforcement, a source familiar with the situation told the Daily News. Trump said he was unaware of the cuts when Hochul called him to object to them last Sunday, the source added.

Hochul claimed victory, saying she was “glad (Trump) heard our call.”

“That means $187 million for the NYPD, FDNY & first responders across the state that keep New Yorkers safe,” the governor tweeted.

Sen. Chuck Schumer (D- New York) accused Trump of a failed attempt to “target New York” with the anti-terror cuts.

“We fought back and won,” he tweeted. “(Trump) saw the writing on the wall: his public safety cuts were illegal, dangerous, and wrong.”

A source said the reversal of the cuts, which would have represented the biggest federal defunding of New York police in decades, came after Schumer reached out to contacts at the Department of Justice about the potential danger to national security.

Rep. Mike Lawler (R- Westchester County), who is locked in a tricky reelection fight, thanked Trump for stepping in, although he didn’t explain the reason for the cuts either.

“Thank you for (reversing) these proposed cuts to ensure law enforcement has the resources they need to protect New York against a terrorist attack,” Lawler tweeted.

In addition to the anti-terror cuts to New York and other Democratic states, the White House slashed infrastructure and other funding to blue states, including $18 billion for the Second Avenue subway and the new Hudson River tunnel to New Jersey, as well as $2 billion for a Chicago subway project.

Those cuts, which Democrats deride as brazen partisan political retaliation, remain in effect.

Hochul revealed the cuts earlier this week and lashed out at the cuts in a harshly worded letter to DHS Secretary Kristi Noem.

“Trump’s decision to defund the police is dangerous,” the governor said. “I’m fighting back and demanding answers.”

NYPD Commissioner Jessica Tisch lambasted the Trump administration’s counterterrorism funding cuts as “a betrayal of this city.”

“I want to be very direct about this: If these cuts go through as planned, it will represent a devastating blow to our counterterrorism intelligence programs in New York City,” Tisch said, standing alongside Mayor Adams at police headquarters Wednesday.  “New York City … will absolutely be a less safe place six months from now.”

Tisch said the funding being slashed forms “the backbone of the NYPD counterterrorism program.”

The money in question funds NYPD bomb squad technicians, heavily armed patrols of sensitive locations, radiation detection capabilities, intelligence analysis programs, camera systems and training for active shooter incidents, among other initiatives.

Adams also denounced the planned cuts: “These funds are crucial,” he said.

A federal judge Wednesday had put a temporary hold on the cuts, saying the state and city would “likely” be able to prove they were improperly carried out by the feds.

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