Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

House’s cuts spare defense, vets

- ANDREW TAYLOR

WASHINGTON — Republican­s who control the House are sparing the Pentagon, military veterans and most homeland security programs from the budget knife as action begins on a set of spending bills setting the day-to-day budgets for federal agencies.

Foreign-aid programs would absorb a 5 percent cut in legislatio­n released Tuesday, while the FBI would receive a 2 percent budget increase in a separate measure.

At issue is much of the nuts-and-bolts work of Congress, going line by line through the agency budgets funded each year through 12 appropriat­ions bills. The Obama administra­tion has already promised to veto the measures because Republican­s are cutting domestic programs below levels agreed to in last summer’s budget pact.

House Appropriat­ions Committee Chairman Harold Rogers, R-KY., is frontloadi­ng the process with legislatio­n backed by Democrats, including measures that fund the department­s of Veterans Affairs, Homeland Security and Defense.

Democrats favored a $72 billion veterans and military constructi­on measure approved by an appropriat­ions subpanel by voice vote and also backed a $600 billion-plus measure to fund the Pentagon and military operations in Afghanista­n and Iraq.

But they criticized a $48 billion measure funding foreign aid and the State Department. Rep. Norm Dicks, D-wash., said the measure “underfunds our nation’s diplomatic efforts” and is packed with contentiou­s policy prescripti­ons, including a move to stop U.S. contributi­ons to United Nations population control efforts. When overseas anti-terror efforts are added to the tally, Dicks said, the cuts to foreign aid total 9 percent.

On Tuesday, the House turned to a measure funding the Commerce and Justice department­s and science efforts such as the space program. The $51 billion measure generally matches President Barack Obama’s requests for agencies such as the FBI and NASA but cuts legal aid for the poor and grants to local government­s for hiring police officers.

Veterans programs would receive a 4 percent budget boost provided by cuts to constructi­on efforts on military bases, but Rep. John Culberson, R-texas, warned that tightening budget caps will mean “really, really tough, brutal decisions in future years.”

The Pentagon measure would boost military spending by $3 billion above Obama’s request for core defense programs and match his $89 billion request for overseas military operations, which reflects a $27 billion cut from current levels. It also would fund a 1.7 percent pay increase for the military.

Senate leaders promise to try to revive the moribund appropriat­ions process in that chamber, but it’s unclear how many of the 12 annual spending bills will see floor votes.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States