Proposed Tech Modernization Fund Allocation Falls to $5M Despite Bipartisan Support

The Trump administration has called on Congress to approve steep cuts to federal cybersecurity and information technology modernization programs in 2026 – and lawmakers appear to be heeding the call.
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A Senate Committee on Appropriations draft bill funding a slew of small government agencies and the Department of Treasury includes sharp reductions to the government-wide Technology Modernization Fund and the Office of the National Cyber Director (see: Trump Homeland Security Budget Guts CISA Staff, Key Programs).
The bill appropriates $20 million for the Office of the National Cyber Director, in alignment with the White House request and down nearly 7% from the current level.
It also allocates $5 million for the Technology Modernization Fund, a fraction of the $75 million the Biden administration sought for fiscal 2025 and far below earlier bipartisan pushes to expand the account. The funding level would make it one of the smallest appropriations since the fund was created under the Modernizing Government Technology Act of 2017.
Many departments lack funding to replace legacy platforms or undergo major technology overhaul campaigns without multi-year capital support or cross agency investment vehicles.
The fund’s uncertain future is further compounded by a separate White House proposal that would change how the program is financed in 2026. Instead of relying on a single annual appropriation, the Office of Management and Budget and General Services Administration previously proposed allowing agencies to shift a portion of their own funds into fund up to a total of $100 million per year.
The committee report shows the reduction is part of a broader pattern of the administration and the Republican-led Congress moving away from cross agency modernization efforts and shared cybersecurity oversight. The Federal Citizen Services Fund, which supports USA.gov, shared services and government-wide digital platforms, drops from $75 million to $70 million under the bill.
The Financial Crimes Enforcement Network within the Department of Treasury remains flat in nominal terms.
Other technology offices face significant cuts in the proposal. IRS technology and operations support funding falls to $3.193 billion, down from about $4.1 billion the previous year – a reduction that would likely hit core infrastructure supporting taxpayer data protection, identity services and internal cybersecurity.
There are some isolated increases in cyber and IT funding: Treasury’s cybersecurity enhancement account rises to $59 million, up from $36.5 million in fiscal 2025, a jump of more than 60%. Treasury’s department-wide systems and capital investments account remains level at about $11 million, even as broader shared services see cuts across the agency.
The fiscal 2026 proposal appears to shift responsibility back onto individual agencies and away from collective modernization tools and offices that experts argue are critical for reducing government fragmentation and improving federal cyber posture.
