$1.1T Pentagon funding bill leaves room for White House spending spree
U.S. House lawmakers have unveiled the draft text of their $1.14 trillion annual defense bill, a must-pass bipartisan bill that fits into President Donald Trump’s plan to increase the Pentagon’s budget to historic levels.
The House Armed Services Committee will mark up the proposed fiscal year 2027 National Defense Authorization Act on June 4.
Besides the usual investments in munitions restocking, shipbuilding, military construction, nuclear infrastructure, and technology innovation research, the bill enhances cybersecurity coordination with Israel in light of the ongoing conflict in Iran.
It also provides funding for securing supply chains, as well as supports new workforce initiatives aimed at boosting mining of critical minerals and raises all servicemember salaries by 3.6%, among other measures.
The mammoth package aligns with the White House’s proposal to boost the Department of War funding by roughly 43%.
The White House requested a $1.5 trillion Pentagon budget for fiscal year 2027, with roughly $1.1 trillion coming from the NDAA and an extra $350 billion from a separate party-line budget reconciliation bill.
Though Republican lawmakers have not yet confirmed whether they intend to follow that plan, party leaders want to pass another budget reconciliation bill – which could include the $350 billion defense earmark – to push through more of the Trump administration’s agenda before the 2026 midterm elections.
The House’s NDAA draft must be reconciled at some point with the yet-to-be-released Senate version. Last year’s NDAA cost taxpayers $900 billion, and the DOD also received an $173 billion boost that same year from Republicans’ “One Big Beautiful Bill.”
Federal budget watchdog organizations like the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget are urging lawmakers to rein in military spending, particularly since the DoW is the only federal agency to never pass an audit.
“There is little doubt that the United States has immense defense and national security needs. But having allocated $4.6 trillion over the past five years to defense, there should also be little doubt that there is substantial waste, fraud, abuse, and errors within the defense budget,” CRFB stated Wednesday.
“Before Congress considers an enormous expansion of the defense budget, they should work to understand what previously-appropriated dollars are still available and make sure existing dollars are being spent wisely and cost-effectively.”
Latest News Stories
Capital Imp Committee: Health Dept Elevator Repair Costs Significantly Lower Than Estimates
Meeting Summary and Briefs: Beecher Fire Protection District for December 18, 2025
Legislative Committee Adopts 2026 Federal Legislative Agenda
Poll: Majority prefer Trump’s immigration policies over Biden’s
Illinois eyes smarter park funding: handicap accessibility gets priority
Nation’s first primary states to begin early voting
Vermont EV buses prove unreliable for transportation this winter
Idaho has least childcare regulations, Vermont the most out of the 50 states
Will County Treasurer’s Investment Strategy Yields $6 Million in Income
Lawsuit investor Burford can upend Sysco’s $50M chicken price settlement
Beecher Fire Trustees Approve Employee Benefits and Vacation Payouts
Gas prices projected to rise if Pritzker fails to act on E10 waiver