• House sends defense bill to Biden, despite conservative anger over spy

    From Biased Journalism@21:1/5 to All on Thu Dec 14 10:46:34 2023
    XPost: or.politics, ca.politics, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh

    <http://politico.com>
    House sends defense bill to Biden, despite conservative anger over spy
    powers, culture wars
    By Connor O'Brien 12/14/2023 10:48 AM EST Link Copied

    The Republican-controlled House passed a final $886 billion defense policy
    bill on Thursday, even though many conservative provisions had been
    stripped through negotiations with the Senate.

    The National Defense Authorization Act now heads to President Joe Biden,
    who is expected to sign it, ensuring that defense policy legislation
    becomes law for the 63rd straight year.

    The 310-118 vote on the annual policy bill succeeded despite conservative opposition to a short-term extension of federal surveillance powers and
    the lack of hardline provisions on abortion, transgender troops and
    diversity in the ranks.

    Speaker Mike Johnson brought the bill up for a vote under an expedited
    process that bypasses procedural votes that have sunk other bills in Republicans' razor-thin majority. But the tactic required a two-thirds
    vote, meaning substantial opposition could have tanked the defense bill.

    Ultimately, 73 Republicans and 45 Democrats opposed the final defense
    bill. Despite being in the minority, Democrats supplied more votes to pass
    the bill than Republicans.

    While the compromise cleared with bipartisan support, it could still
    create another headache for Johnson, who is already taking heat from the
    GOP's right flank over other issues.

    Hardliners, led by the conservative House Freedom Caucus, opposed the bill after congressional leaders attached a four-month renewal of spy powers
    that target foreigners' communications. The authority, known as Section
    702, is set to expire at the end of the year. Johnson has defended the
    move as necessary to buy time for lawmakers to agree to an overhaul of the program.

    Many hard-right members were also angered by what they contend is a lack
    of GOP wins in the final deal after House Republicans passed their own
    version of the bill replete with conservative policies in July. They've criticized negotiators for dropping House-approved measures to block the Pentagon's abortion travel policy, bar coverage of gender-affirming
    medical care for transgender troops and prohibit drag shows on military
    bases.

    Freedom Caucus Chair Scott Perry (R-Pa.) ahead of the vote criticized the
    final agreement as "essentially the Senate bill with a couple of crumbs in
    it."

    "Only in Washington must we bring a bill to the floor so that we are able
    to militarily confront China while at the same time embracing the policies
    that make the United States more like China," added Rep. Matt Gaetz
    (R-Fla.).

    Prior to the final vote, Freedom Caucus member Chip Roy (R-Texas) forced a
    vote to adjourn the House in protest of the bill and the surveillance extension. The House easily rejected it.

    Top Republicans contend the bill still has some significant conservative
    policy wins that tackle Biden administration policies they argue distract
    the military from its war fighting mission. Those include a pay cap and
    hiring freeze for employees who work in the Pentagon's diversity, equity
    and inclusion programs, a prohibition on funding to promote critical race theory and a ban on displaying unapproved flags, including the Pride Flag,
    on military installations.

    "I'll be the first to admit I'm disappointed we didn't get all the
    priorities we wanted," House Armed Services Chair Mike Rogers (R-Ala.)
    said during floor debate. "But you know what? The Senate is pretty
    disappointed they didn't get the priorities they wanted either.

    "It takes compromise to move legislation in a divided government, and this
    bill is a good compromise," he said. "It's laser-focused on deterring our adversaries, especially China."

    House Republicans were ultimately forced to drop the most contentious
    proposals - led by an amendment to block the Pentagon from reimbursing
    travel costs for troops seeking abortions - in negotiations with the
    Senate to win Democratic support for a final bill.

    Nearly all House Democrats opposed the bill that narrowly passed the House
    in July over the culture wars provisions. Most of those lawmakers flipped
    their votes on the more centrist compromise bill.

    The top Armed Services Democrat, Rep. Adam Smith of Washington, praised
    the bill and slammed GOP hardliners for their criticism of the defense negotiations.

    "I really don't understand where people get the idea that the way the
    world works is you get absolutely everything you want and nobody else gets anything," Smith said.

    "This isn't how ‘This Town' works. This is how life works," he said.

    The Democratic-led Senate approved its own bill that sidestepped the most controversial issues in July with bipartisan support. The compromise
    cleared the upper chamber Wednesday night by a wide vote.

    In all, the bill authorizes a $886 billion national defense budget, which matches Biden's fiscal 2024 request. That includes $842 billion for
    Pentagon programs, $32.5 billion for the Energy Department's nuclear
    weapons programs and $11.5 billion for other national security programs.

    But the bill doesn't allocate any funding. Congress still needs to approve
    a full year appropriations bill for the Pentagon when lawmakers return
    next year.

    The measure authorizes $300 million for the Pentagon to arm Ukraine.
    Another $14.7 billion was included for the Pacific Deterrence Initiative
    to boost U.S. military presence in the region to guard against China.

    The bill also includes several provisions to implement the trilateral
    AUKUS submarine pact between the U.S., U.K. and Australia, including authorizing the transfer of Virginia-class attack subs to the Australian
    Navy.

    The bill authorizes funding for Pentagon weapons systems, including $32.9 billion for Navy shipbuilding efforts. That includes an extra $1 billion
    for a San Antonio-class amphibious warship the Navy didn't request in its budget, but that Marine Corps leaders urged lawmakers to approve to aid
    their mission.

    The final deal also green lights a 5.2 percent pay raise for military personnel.



    --
    ==================================================
    Anyone that isn't confused doesn't really
    understand the situation.
    ~Edward R. Murrow USA WWII Correspondent ==================================================

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  • From ULTRA!@21:1/5 to All on Fri Dec 15 05:15:42 2023
    XPost: or.politics, ca.politics, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh

    <http://politico.com>
    House sends defense bill to Biden, despite conservative anger over spy >powers, culture wars
    By Connor O'Brien 12/14/2023 10:48 AM EST Link Copied

    The Republican-controlled House passed a final $886 billion defense policy >bill on Thursday, even though many conservative provisions had been
    stripped through negotiations with the Senate.


    The answer to Conservative culture wars is to castrate Conservatve men so
    they don't reproduce.

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