House narrowly passes military construction, veterans funding bill
Republicans muscled through the spending bill in an 218-206 vote.
Connor O'Brien
The House cleared its military construction and veterans spending bill Wednesday, almost entirely along party lines — the first annual government funding measure to be approved in a contentious budget season.
What happened: Republicans muscled through the spending bill in an 218-206 vote. Nearly all Democrats opposed the bill, with only two breaking ranks to help pass it.
Partisan divide: Democrats are at odds with President Donald Trump’s budget proposal, which seeks deep cuts in domestic spending while keeping defense spending at the same level as this year — while using Republicans’ megabill to layer on an extra $150 billion for the Pentagon.
Democrats have criticized Republicans for moving ahead with the military construction bill — which deals with the sliver of the Pentagon budget that includes the armed services’ infrastructure projects — before the administration has sent Congress a full defense budget proposal.
They’ve also slammed policy provisions in the bill that limit funding to cover abortions and gender-affirming care at the Veterans Affairs Department.
By the numbers: The bill provides $152 billion in overall discretionary spending, most of which goes to the VA — just under a $5 billion increase from the current year. Appropriators also approved $300 billion in mandatory funding for veterans’ benefits.
For the Pentagon, the bill allocates $18 billion for military construction and family housing projects, $480 million more than the current year.
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