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WASHINGTON — Republicans controlling the House promised Thursday to slash domestic agencies’ budgets by almost 20 percent for the coming year, the first salvo in what’s sure to be a bruising battle over their drive to cut federal spending to where it was before President Barack Obama took office.

“Washington’s spending spree is over,” declared Paul Ryan, the Budget Committee chairman who announced the plan. “The spending limits will restore sanity to a broken budget process,” he said, returning “to pre-stimulus, pre-bailout levels.”

But Republicans won’t get everything they want. Democrats control the White House and the Senate, and even Republicans in the stoutly conservative House may have second thoughts when the magnitude of the cuts sinks in.

The White House says the cuts could lead to widespread furloughs of federal employees and force vulnerable people off subsidized housing, reduce services in national parks and slash aid to schools and local police and fire departments.

The House Republicans are seeking to keep their campaign promise to cut $100 billion from domestic programs. The initial cuts would be approved over coming weeks as Congress wraps up the long-overdue 2011 budget; the second stage would come as the House GOP advances a fresh round of spending bills for fiscal 2012, which begins Oct. 1.

The hardest-hit agencies would include the Food and Drug Administration, the IRS and the departments of Commerce, Housing and Urban Development, and Agriculture, according to partial details released by the House Appropriations Committee. Foreign aid on an annualized basis would see a 6 percent cut. Congress’ own budget would be barely touched.

Conservative Republicans want even greater cuts, and they’ll be given the chance to impose them in a freewheeling floor debate scheduled for the week of Feb. 14.

In Thursday’s plan:

• The Department of Homeland Security would face a budget freeze instead of the 3 percent hike proposed by Obama.

• Rapidly growing spending on veterans’ health care appears likely to be largely untouched.

• Republicans would scale back Obama’s proposed 4 percent, $23 billion increase for the Pentagon. Instead, the military budget would grow by $10 billion, a 2 percent increase.

• Health research and federal aid to local school districts appear likely to bear a relatively small share of the pain when lawmakers draw up a massive spending bill for the departments of Education, Labor, and Health and Human Services.

Republicans made a campaign promise to cut $100 billion from Obama’s request for domestic agencies such as the Department of Education, for the budget year that began in October. But since the year is well underway, they’re so far falling short, just $58 billion under the plan released Thursday. They promise to try to fully impose the dramatic cuts during the debate.

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