The Columbus Dispatch

Military pay raise at risk in Confederat­e base fight

- Andrew Taylor

WASHINGTON – An annual defense policy measure that has passed Congress every year since the Kennedy administra­tion is in danger of cratering next month over a move by Democrats to rename military bases, such as Fort Benning, that are named after Confederat­e officers.

President Donald Trump opposes renaming bases like Fort Hood and has threatened to veto the popular measure over the provision, which was added to both the House and Senate versions of the so-called defense authorizat­ion bill this summer.

Republican­s are vowing they will not send the broader bill to Trump if it includes language requiring bases named after Confederat­e officers to be renamed. Trump used the debate this summer to appeal to Southern voters nostalgic about the Confederac­y, and those appeals remain relevant now due to two Senate runoff elections in Georgia that will determine control of the chamber during the first two years of President-elect Joe Biden’s tenure.

“I am concerned that there is at least the potential that political concerns, especially with the Georgia runoffs, are going to play a bigger role,” said top House Armed Services Committee Republican Mac Thornberry of Texas.

Senate Armed Services Committee Chairman James Inhofe, R-okla., is strongly backing Trump, aides involved in the talks say. But Democrats, who won GOP support in both the House and Senate to force the renaming of the bases, vow they will not back down. Typically, when both House and Senate versions of legislatio­n contain comparable provisions, the default position is to leave the language in the final product. The differences between the House and Senate provisions are relatively modest.

“It’s Senate language that we want to agree to,” said House Armed Services Committee Chairman Adam Smith, DWash. “So there shouldn’t be controvers­y here.” He called Trump “a little bit erratic at the moment.”

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, DCalif., said the names must be changed.

“It is imperative that the conference report include provisions that secure

this essential priority,” said Pelosi. “Our bases should reflect our highest ideals as Americans.”

The bill has to pass next month to avoid breaking a 59-year streak of enacting the annual measure, which sets policy across the Pentagon and would award the military a 3% pay raise starting Jan. 1, among its other provisions.

White House chief of staff Mark Meadows has even floated the idea of a tradeoff in which Trump would sign the legislatio­n containing the Democratic language in exchange for repealing socalled Section 230, a legal shield for social media outlets like Facebook that protects websites from liability for content posted on their sites.

 ?? BRANDEN CAMP/AP FILE ?? A defense policy measure contains a provision to rename bases named after Confederat­e officers, such as Fort Benning.
BRANDEN CAMP/AP FILE A defense policy measure contains a provision to rename bases named after Confederat­e officers, such as Fort Benning.

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