Space news for June 2025: Is it just me or does it Seem like Politics is Creeping into Everything? 

Frequent readers of this blog know that ‘Space News’ is probably my most common topic and they have come to expect stories about space missions and spacecraft, both manned and unmanned, past, present and future. Not this time however because thanks to Trump’s determination to screw up every department of our government the big news about space this month all deals with politics and budgets.

Is it just me or does it seem like all our wonderful leaders do anymore is fight each other! (Credit: Southwest Times Record)

Trump wants another big tax cut for himself and his billionaire buddies, a tax cut that is estimated to add more than another $3 Trillion dollars to our national debt. The sheer recklessness of this plan has already caused the credit agency Moody’s to downgrade our nation’s credit rating from its triple ‘A’ position and Moody’s was the last of the big credit agencies to give US bonds such a high rating. In order to minimize the increase to the deficit somewhat Republicans in congress are searching high and low for cuts that they can make in federal spending. They can’t cut back on Social Security or Medicare, that would be political suicide, and Trump actually wants to increase the military budget so every other government agency is being targeted for massive cutbacks.

Along with all of these provisions Trump’s Big Beautiful Bill includes cuts to almost every government department, including NASA. (Credit: ABC News)

That includes NASA. A proposed budget for the space agency in 2026 has been released and it contains a overall reduction of nearly 20% in NASA’s resources, much of which will come from the science budget. Overall NASA’s budget would drop from its current $25 billion to less than $20 billion but the science budget, the best part, the part of NASA that has achieved the most notable discoveries over the last twenty-five years, would see its budget slashed from $7.3 billion to $3.9 billion.

NASA’s budget is divided into several categories. The biggest cuts planned by the Trump Administration would be to the Science section. In other words, the fun stuff! (Credit: The Planetary Society)

Specific details include cutting the astrophysics budget by two thirds to $487 million and the heliophysics budget by even more to just $455 million. Earth science would see its funding cut in half to $1.033 billion and planetary science would suffer a thirty percent drop to $1.929 billion. Fortunately most existing science programs like the Hubble and James Webb space telescopes along with the Mars rover Perseverance and Parker Solar Probe would continue to be funded, all be it at a lower level.

While both the Hubble and James Webb space telescopes would see their budgets cut other planned space telescopes, like the Nancy Grace Roman, would be cut entirely! (Credit: Los Angeles Times)

Not so new programs like the Nancy Grace Roman space telescope and the Mars Sample Return (MSR), which could be canceled entirely. This is especially bad for the Nancy Grace Roman telescope, which has finished construction and is now undergoing testing in preparation for a scheduled launch as early as 2026. Any missions beyond that, for example proposed helicopters for both Mars and Saturn’s moon Titan probably won’t even get off of the drawing board because there simple won’t be any money to fund them.

The success of the little Mars ‘copter Ingenuity has inspired NASA to start planning bigger, more autonomous helicopters for both Mars and Saturn’s Moon Titan. Those plans will be dead in the water if Trump gets his way! (Credit: Science Alert)

How much these budget cuts will effect manned missions remains to be seen, but you can bet that there won’t be an increase over the number that are currently planned. At the moment NASA still intends to continue to man the International Space Station (ISS) until it is de-orbited in the year 2030 and to proceed with the Artemis Lunar program at a rate of about one mission per year. In fact Lockheed-Martin has recently delivered the Mission 2 Orion manned capsule to NASA for a possible mission in early 2026.

The Orion capsule for the Artemis mission 2 has completed construction and is now undergoing testing. But will it ever actually fly? (Credit: Space)

However it must be remembered that Elon Musk, the head of Trump’s Department Of Government Efficiency or DOGE, who just happens to be the CEO of Space X, has publicly declared that the ISS should be de-orbited as soon as possible. There are also rumours that Trump will cancel the Space Launch System (SLS), the big and very expensive rocket that will take the Artemis astronauts to the Moon, immediately after the mission that actually puts Americans back on the Moon. That would be just like Trump, he’d make a big deal about how he was the one who got us back to the Moon and then cancel any further missions, goodbye lunar base!

NASA had hoped that this time once we got to the Moon we’d stay there, eventually building a Lunar Base. Again Trump’s cuts will make that dream impossible. (Credit: en.wikipedia.com)

And now Trump and Elon have had a big bust up over Musk’s criticism of how the ‘Big Beautiful Bill’ will add more than three trillion dollars to the nation’s debt. Like a pair of immature children the two have been trading insults and threats including Trump’s to cancel all of Musk’s federal contracts, which would leave NASA with no way to get its astronauts to the ISS. And don’t forget that Space X is also building the Lunar lander for the Artemis program. Canceling that contract would leave NASA without a vehicle to actually put astronauts on the Moon’s surface.

Children say nasty things about each other behind the other’s back. Trump and Musk do it on Twitter. Not much difference really! (Credit: The New York Times)

The exploration of space requires long-term planning and financial commitment, which is difficult to do when you’re at the mercy of politicians who are incapable of thinking past the next election. And now we are strapped with a president whose attention span is that of a five year old. All of which makes it a good bet that the next person to set foot on the Moon will be Chinese!

It’s your choice America. We’re ahead right now but China is catching up. (Credit: The Conversation)

Speaking of the Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope the spacecraft has completed its assembly and is now undergoing final testing, including shock and thermal testing in a giant vacuum chamber. The testing is taking place at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, which is also slated to be closed due the budget cuts discussed above. Once the testing is completed the Space Telescope will be shipped to the Kennedy Space Center where it will be prepared for a launch as soon as late fall of next year, 2026. Assuming of course, it doesn’t just get canceled after all of the money that’s already been spent on it!

Named for the astronomer who convinced NASA to build the Hubble Space Telescope, the Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope will study Dark Energy while at the same time search for exo-planets. It has completed construction and is currently undergoing testing but Trump’s budget would cancel its launch, wasting all of the money that’s already been spent on it! (Credit: Space)

One final note, which probably also has something to do with the budget cuts is that as of June 12th NASA will no longer be supporting its ‘Spot the Station’ website! For several decades now the information available on this website has enabled people from around the World to experience something of space exploration as they watched the ISS fly across the sky.

This is what NASA’s ‘Spot the Station’ website used to look like, giving all of the details you needed to be able to watch the ISS as it traveled overhead. No more, it site is gone now and although you can download the app for your phone it’s just one less way our kids can learn about the Universe above their heads! (Credit: Research Parent)

Well no longer, the website will be closed as of June 12th. NASA plans to continue their mobile app so you can still get the information you need to watch the ISS pass overhead but let’s be honest, we should have more ways to get people, especially young people interested in space and science. Instead, we’ll now have one less way!

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