Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Mcconnell slow walks ‘must-pass’ defense bill as funding deadline looms

- Tribune News Service Mcclatchy Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON — Back in early October, Mitch Mcconnell took to the Senate floor to thrash Democrats for leaving the annual bill that funds national defense “in procedural limbo for months.”

His No. 2, Sen. John Thune of South Dakota, joined him weeks later to complain, “We can’t afford to wait any longer to deal with it.”

Yet now, as Democrats attempt to push through the $768 billion stipend for the Pentagon as the year careens toward a close, it’s Mcconnell who wants to slow things down, requesting a “reasonable number of amendments” during a “normal process” on the Senate floor.

“The Democratic Leader wants to block the Senate from fully and robustly debating a number of important issues,” Mcconnell charged.

“The [National Defense

Authorizat­ion Act] is not finished yet. So the Senate cannot be finished yet either.”

Democrats have a hunch as to why the Republican leader is pumping the brakes on legislatio­n he’s even said must pass — and eventually will pass. The more time Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer is consumed with hammering out an agreement on the defense appropriat­ion, the less time he has to muscle through President Joe

Biden’s largest legislativ­e prize: the $2.2 trillion Build Back Better social spending bonanza, which cleared the U.S. House just before Thanksgivi­ng.

“When we tried to get consent to move on this package of [NDAA] amendments, our Republican colleagues came down to the floor and objected not once but seven times,” Schumer complained on Tuesday. “So we have had ample debate. This has been a fair and bipartisan and reasonable process that has showed respect to the other side. But this is a new Republican Party, unfortunat­ely.”

Mcconnell wants more — potentiall­y significan­tly more than the 18 amendments originally agreed to by the chair and ranking Republican member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, even though there were only seven amendments in 2020, when Mcconnell was majority leader.

The impetus for an accord could simply be the other more imminent deadline: the expiration of government funding on Friday, which both parties have pledged to avoid.

If the overall NDAA gets stuck, there is likely to be an escape hatch through a continuing resolution that funds the nation’s defense for the interim. But foreign policy experts contest the main consequenc­e from the standoff is how it is viewed by U.S. allies and foes.

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