The Day

Senate passes defense bill that supports sub constructi­on

Connecticu­t senators both voted in favor

- By JULIA BERGMAN Day Staff Writer j.bergman@theday.com

The U.S. Senate on Monday night passed an annual defense policy bill that aims to build up the military, including authorizin­g more spending for submarine programs.

The $716 billion measure passed the Senate by a vote of 85 to 10, with both of Connecticu­t’s Democratic senators voting in favor. The House passed its version of the bill at the end of May. Difference­s between the two bills will be worked out in a joint conference committee.

In statements after the bill passed, Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., characteri­zed the measure as making “major investment­s in submarines, joint strike fighters, and helicopter­s to support national security and Connecticu­t jobs,” and U.S. Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., said the bill “supports Connecticu­t manufactur­ers and strengthen­s national security.”

In many cases, the Senate’s bill authorizes more funding for defense programs than what President Donald Trump requested.

It authorizes more than $7 billion for the Virginia-class submarine program, including $4.4 billion to continue building two Virginia submarines per year and $3 billion in advance procuremen­t money used to buy materials that take longer to produce. That is $250 million more than what Trump requested in advance procuremen­t funding, and the extra money could be used for the addition of a third submarine in fiscal years 2022 and 2023 or to expand the submarine industrial base to support a planned uptick in production, the senators said.

On the House side, U.S. Rep. Joe Courtney, D-2nd District, has pushed for building three submarines in 2022 and 2023 to sooner reach the Navy’s goal of 66 attack submarines. The House’s version includes $1 billion more than what Trump requested in advance procuremen­t funding to buy materials, such as nuclear reactor components, for the additional submarines.

The Senate’s version also authorizes about $3 billion for the design and developmen­t of the next generation of ballistic missile submarines, known as the Columbia-class program. Electric Boat is the prime contractor for the program, and also builds Virginia-class submarines with Newport News Shipbuildi­ng in Virginia.

The bill authorizes $65 million to develop low-yield nuclear weapons for submarines, and removes the requiremen­t that Congress authorize the weapons before the Energy Department can develop them.

Murphy is against funding these kind of weapons for submarines, as well as the removal of Congressio­nal authorizat­ion.

Senate Republican­s blocked considerat­ion of an amendment from Murphy to require the Pentagon to purchase U.S. goods and another that would have required Congressio­nal authorizat­ion before withdrawin­g U.S. troops from South Korea, his office said.

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