Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Another government shutdown?

- THOMAS SPOEHR

Actions have consequenc­es. So do inactions. Take the defense budget, which the White House is turning into a poster child for procrastin­ation, a practice that threatens the security of all Americans.

The Senate has decided it can’t wait any longer and tore up its schedule to focus on nomination­s instead of budget review. Rep. Adam Smith, chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, recently warned that receipt of the administra­tion’s defense budget past mid-May makes it unlikely the House will be able to produce a defense authorizat­ion or appropriat­ion bill before the August recess.

And if they miss that mark, passage of the necessary bills by the end of the fiscal year is doubtful.

Smith is right. We need a real budget, and yesterday. Failure to pass these bills by the end of the fiscal year puts the Defense Department (and the rest of the federal government) into a continuing resolution, or worse—a shutdown— both of which would be deeply injurious to our national defense.

The Biden administra­tion did send a so-called “skinny” budget to Congress on April 9 providing top-level numbers. The section dealing with the Defense Department was devoid of details, other than to announce a reduction of $7 billion from what the Trump administra­tion had proposed for fiscal year 2022, and an overall $5 billion loss in buying power from 2021 due to inflation.

Defense’s section stood in sharp contrast to all the other federal department­s, where the administra­tion appeared thrilled to articulate plans, from fighting climate change—$6.9 billion for Commerce—to Education’s $100 million to foster diverse schools.

Despite President Joe Biden’s seemingly tough talk about China and Russia, cutting national defense while the Defense Department is trying to adapt to great power competitio­n sends a contradict­ory message, both to our allies and adversarie­s.

There have been four presidenti­al transition­s since law set the due date for the budget as the first Monday in February, and each of them has needed a delay before submitting their budget. The average number of days delayed was 82. This year, on day 82 (April 24) there was no budget in sight.

Most should know that operating under a continuing resolution presents challenges for the Pentagon. New programs—unmanned platforms, robotics, artificial intelligen­ce applicatio­ns—are delayed and unable to start. Military operations are impacted. Training is slowed.

What administra­tion wouldn’t want the leisure to develop a brand-new budget completely reflective of their priorities and plans? But such desires are normally tempered with the realizatio­n that there is a clock running: the heartless apparatus that cuts off federal spending on Oct. 1.

The Biden administra­tion needs to get Congress its budget request now, before more time passes and the chances for on-time defense funding and authorizat­ions further diminish.

Our troops are counting on those in Washington to do their jobs, just as they are expected to do theirs. Don’t let them down.

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