Groups Urge Voters to Call Lawmakers and Demand Cuts to Bloated Pentagon Budget
Progressive campaigners on Wednesday urged members of the U.S. public to contact their representatives and demand their support for a pair of amendments that would reduce the country’s military spending, a call that comes as the House is set to vote on legislation that would hand the Pentagon more than $800 billion in the coming fiscal year.
“That’s almost a trillion dollars—approaching the highest historical levels for U.S. military funding since World War II,” the National Priorities Project (NPP) noted in an email. “That dwarfs spending on many other agencies responsible for social spending, combined.”
NPP is calling on the House, narrowly controlled by Democrats, to attach two separate amendments to the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA), sprawling legislation that could receive a vote in the lower chamber as soon as this week.
The first amendment, led by Reps. Barbara Lee (D-Calif.) and Mark Pocan (D-Wis.), would claw back the $37 billion that the House Armed Services Committee recently voted to add to President Joe Biden’s historically high military budget request for fiscal year 2023.
In its current form, the NDAA topline is $839 billion—a figure that includes $808.4 billion for the Pentagon and $30.5 billion for the Department of Energy, which oversees the country’s nuclear arsenal.
Lee and Pocan are also spearheading a second NDAA amendment that, if approved, would cut $100 billion from the current topline military spending level of $782 billion.
“Call your representative directly TODAY, or call the U.S. Capitol Switchboard at 202-224-3121,” NPP wrote in its email. “Urge them to vote ‘yes’ on both amendments.”
On Tuesday, the House Rules Committee agreed to allow the two Lee-Pocan amendments—along with hundreds of others—to receive votes on the House floor in the coming days.
A February poll showed that a majority of U.S. adults support cuts to military spending. Last month, the consumer advocacy group Public Citizen released a survey showing that 60% of likely voters want to keep military funding at the level Biden requested earlier this year.
Originally published at Commondreams.org, written by Jake Johnson.