Pentagon, homeland security funding favored
BY ANDREW TAYLOR Associated Press
Wednesday, May 09, 2012
WASHINGTON — Republicans
controlling 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 hike in a separate
measure.
At issue is much of the nutsand-
bolts work of Congress,
going line by line through
the agency budgets funded
each year through 12 appropriations
bills. Democrats will
support several of the early
bills, but 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.
But House Appropriations
Committee Chairman Harold
Rogers, R-Ky., is frontloading
the process with legislation
backed by Democrats, including
measures funding the departments
of Veterans Affairs,
Homeland Security and Defense.
Democrats spoke glowingly
of a $72 billion veterans and
military construction measure
approved by an Appropriations
subpanel by voice vote
and also backed a $600 billion-
plus measure funding 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 controversial
policy prescriptions,
including a move to stop U.S.
contributions to United Nations
population control efforts.
Some GOP conservatives
simply refuse to vote for any
spending measure. For instance,
conservatives are likely
to protest more than $5 billion
in disaster aid added in accordance
with last summer’s
budget pact but not accounted
for in the GOP budget plan
that passed in March, which is
likely to cost the homeland security
measure support when
it comes to the floor.
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 like 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 hike 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.