“President Biden’s budget represents a significant commitment to the arts and cultural sector and reflects the continued importance of arts organizations and cultural workers to the health and vitality of the country,” Ann Eilers, the agency’s acting chairman, said in a statement.
The agency said that the “increased investment in the agency will allow it to provide critical support to the arts sector as it struggles to reopen, rehire workers, and generate arts activities that will help fuel the economy.”
The endowment had long been in the cross hairs of Republicans as a symbol of wasteful liberal largess when, in 2017, Trump became the first president to make a formal proposal to eliminate it.
That sparked active lobbying efforts by arts advocates, and the agency survived because of bipartisan support in Congress.
During the Trump years, the agency’s budget grew by about $17 million to $167.5 million in 2021.
Biden has long been regarded as a consistent advocate for government funding for the arts. The American Alliance of Museums cheered Biden’s plan, saying in a statement it was “a welcome change from the past four years.”