Donald Trump questions $21M USAID contribution to India for voter turnout

US President Donald Trump questioned the purpose of providing USD 21 million to India for “voter turnout” as he reiterated that America “can hardly get in there” because of high Indian tariffs.

US President Donald Trump (centre right) and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi (centre left) during a meeting in Washington DC in February 2025. Photo courtesy: x.com/narendramodi
US President Donald Trump (centre right) and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi (centre left) during a meeting in Washington DC in February 2025. Photo courtesy: x.com/narendramodi

Trump also said, “India is one of the highest taxing countries in the world”.

He made these remarks after Elon Musk-led DOGE’s (Department of Government Efficiency) disclosed that USAID contributed USD 21 million to Election Commission for boosting voter turnout.

On February 16, The Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), led by billionaire SpaceX CEO Musk, listed items on which the “US taxpayer dollars were going to be spent” and the list included “USD 21M for voter turnout in India”.

DOGE noted that all of the items have been cancelled.

The list also included USD 29 million to “strengthening political landscape in Bangladesh”, USD 20 million for “fiscal federalism” and USD 19 million for “biodiversity conversation” in Nepal as well as USD 47 million for “improving learning outcomes in Asia”.

While signing executive orders on Tuesday at Mar-a-Lago, Trump said, “…And USD 21 million for voter turnout in India. Why are we giving USD 21 million to India? They got a lot of money there. One of the highest taxing countries in the world in terms of us. We can hardly get in there because their tariffs are so high.”

On Tuesday, February 18, he signed executive orders, including a memorandum requiring ‘radical transparency regarding wasteful spending of taxpayer dollars by the federal government.’

Trump said he has a “lot of respect for India. I have a lot of respect for the Prime Minister” and noted that Prime Minister Narendra Modi had visited the White House last week.

“But we’re giving USD 21 million for voter turnout. It’s voter turnout in India. What about like voter turnout here?”

Hours before Prime Minister Modi had a bilateral meeting with Trump in the White House on February 13, the US President had announced reciprocal tariffs.

Under the plan, the Trump administration “will work strenuously to counter non-reciprocal trading arrangements with trading partners by determining the equivalent of a reciprocal tariff with respect to each foreign trading partner”.

During a joint press conference with Modi, Trump, responding to a question on reciprocal tariffs on India, had said “India has been, to us, just about the highest tariffed nation anywhere in the world. They’ve been very strong on tariffs, and I don’t blame them, necessarily, but it’s a different way of doing business. It’s very hard to sell into India because they have trade barriers, very strong tariffs.

The DOGE has been put in charge of overseeing workforce reduction across the government, and as part of that, Musk announced that he would shut down USAID, which is responsible for humanitarian efforts around the globe.

According to USAID officials on February 7, all USAID humanitarian work worldwide had been stopped, reported ABC News.

The agency’s website was shut down before Musk’s announcement. Later, a Trump-nominated judge announced a temporary restraining order that prevents the president and DOGE from placing 2,200 employees on administrative leave.