The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Senate OKs massive defense bill, sends measure to Obama

- By Deb Riechmann

WASHINGTON>> Congress on Wednesday sent President Barack Obama a sweeping $612 billion defense policy bill that he has threatened to veto over an ongoing battle between Democrats and Republican­s about government spending.

The Senate voted to approve the measure 70 to 27.

If Obama vetoes the defense bill, it would be only the fifth time that has happened in the past half-century. The bipartisan measure has become law every year formore than 50 years.

TheHouse passed the bill last week, 269 to 151, with enough Democratic votes to sustain a presidenti­al veto.

Obama says he’ll veto it becausewhi­le it contains all the money he requested, he doesn’t like the way Congress did it. The bill increases defense spending by padding a separate warfightin­g account with an extra $38 billion. Congress didn’t increase money for domestic agencies too as the president wants.

If the veto is sustained, Congresswo­uld be forced to revise the bill or try to settle the larger budget dispute.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said the president’s desire to veto the bill is “outrageous” in the light of national security threats.

“I wish I could say it surprised me that President Obama might — for the sake of unrelated partisan games — actually contemplat­e vetoing a bipartisan defense bill that contains the level of funding authorizat­ion he asked for,” McConnell said on the Senate floor. “I’m calling on him not to, especially in times like these.”

Rhode Island Sen. Jack Reed, the ranking Democrat on the Senate Armed Services Committee, said it was a good bill. He cited 60 provisions aimed at helping streamline defense acquisitio­ns. He said other parts of the bill would help the Defense Department keep pace with changing technology, combat cyberattac­ks and provides key funding for the war in Afghanista­n, the fight against Islamic State militants and Ukraine forces fighting Russian-backed rebels.

But he said he could not support it because it increases the war-fighting account, raising defense spending by doing an endrun around the spending caps.

Adding funds to the account for Overseas Contingenc­y Operations complicate­s defense spending, he said. It does not provide funds for many of the domestic agencies, such as the FBI, Coast Guard, Justice Department, because they remain subject to the spending caps.

“Defense budgeting needs to be based on our long-term military strategy,” he said. “A one year plus-up” to the special account does not provide the Pentagon “with the certainty and stability it needs when building its five-year budget.”

After the vote, House Speaker John Boehner issued a statement pressuring Obama to sign the bill.

Sen. JohnMcCain, chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, and Rep. Mac Thornberry, chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, called a news conference to try to convince Obama to sign it.

“I continue to hope that the president justwon’t veto it — that there will be sufficient pressures on him that he won’t veto,” McCain said.

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