Los Angeles Times

Defense bill with big pay raise for troops goes to Biden

House passes measure though it lacks certain restrictio­ns sought by conservati­ves.

- By Kevin Freking Freking writes for the Associated Press.

— The House passed a defense policy bill Thursday that authorizes the biggest pay raise for troops in more than two decades, overcoming objections from some conservati­ves concerned the measure did not do enough to restrict the Pentagon’s diversity initiative­s, abortion travel policy and gender-affirming healthcare for transgende­r service members.

The $886-billion bill was approved by a vote of 310 to 118 and now goes to President Biden after the Senate had overwhelmi­ngly passed it Wednesday. It is probably the last piece of major legislatio­n Congress will consider before leaving for the holiday break, though negotiatio­ns continue on a bill to aid Ukraine and Israel and boost border security.

The spending in the legislatio­n represents about a 3% increase from the prior year. The bill serves as a blueprint for programs Congress will seek to fund through followup spending bills.

Lawmakers have been negotiatin­g a final defense policy bill for months after each chamber passed strikingly different versions in July. Some of the priorities championed by social conservati­ves were a no-go for Democrats. Negotiator­s dropped them from the final version to get it over the finish line.

That did not go over well with some Republican lawmakers, though most did end up voting for a bill that traditiona­lly has broad, bipartisan support. About twice as many Republican­s voted for the bill as voted against it.

“You almost feel like a parent who’s sent a child off to summer camp and they came back a monster,” Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.) said in opposing the bill. “That’s what we’ve done. This bill came back in far worse shape.”

Gaetz said an earlier draft of the House bill had eliminated the position of chief diversity officer at the Defense Department, but the final measure did not include that provision.

Rep. Adam Smith of Washington state, the ranking Democrat on the House Armed Services Committee, chided the bill’s critics for what he described as an unwillingn­ess to compromise.

“Apparently, you don’t like democracy because that’s what democracy is. You compromise and you work with people and you do it all the time,” Smith said.

Most notably, the bill does not include language sought by House Republican­s to restrict gender-affirming healthcare for transWASHI­NGTON gender service members and it does not block the Pentagon’s abortion travel policy, which allows reimbursem­ent for travel expenses when a service member has to go out of state for an abortion or other reproducti­ve care.

The GOP did win some concession­s on curbing diversity and inclusion training in the military. For example, the bill freezes hiring for such training until a full accounting of the programmin­g and costs is completed and reported to Congress.

One of the most divisive aspects of the bill was a short-term extension of a surveillan­ce program aimed at preventing terrorism and catching spies. The program has detractors from both parties who view it as a threat to the privacy of ordinary Americans.

Some House Republican­s were incensed that the extension was included in the defense policy bill and not voted upon separately through other legislatio­n that included proposed changes to Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Act, or FISA.

The extension continues a tool that permits the U.S. government to collect without a warrant the communicat­ions of non-Americans outside the country to gather foreign intelligen­ce.

U.S. officials have said the tool, first authorized in 2008 and renewed several times, is crucial in disrupting terrorist attacks, cyber intrusions and other national security threats. It has yielded vital intelligen­ce that the U.S. has relied on for operations such as the killing last year of Al Qaeda leader Ayman Zawahiri.

But the administra­tion’s efforts to secure reauthoriz­ation of the program have encountere­d strong bipartisan resistance. Lawmakers are demanding better privacy protection­s for those Americans caught up in the monitoring. They wanted a separate vote on legislatio­n making changes to the program.

“The FBI under President Biden has been weaponized against the American people and major reform is needed,” said Rep. Matthew M. Rosendale (RMont.). “FISA should not be combined with our national defense. And it is unacceptab­le that leadership is bypassing regular order to jam members by forcing them to vote on two unrelated bills with one vote.”

Matthew G. Olsen, an assistant attorney general, praised the passage of the extension. “We cannot afford to be blinded to the many threats we face from foreign adversarie­s, including Iran and China,” he said, “as well as terrorist organizati­ons like Hamas and ISIS,” an acronym often used for the group known as Islamic State.

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