U.S. President Donald Trump on December 13, 2025. (Official White House Photo by Daniel Torok/Flickr)
In the U.S. House of Representatives, lawmakers have been debating the specifics of a $1.14 trillion National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) bill. And as the bill moves along, according to Punchbowl News, the "fireworks" surrounding the debate continue to intensify.
According to Punchbowl reporters Briana Reilly and Anthony Adragna, "House defense hawks' daylong debate over their $1.14 trillion military authorization bill exposed partisan fault lines on a series of fronts — divisions that may only deepen once the legislation hits the chamber's floor. The 14-hour markup also offered an early indication of the topics that could emerge as wedge issues when the House and Senate work to hammer out a compromise plan later this year."
The bill, Reilly and Adragna report, "ultimately cleared committee at 12 a.m. Friday on a 44-12 vote" — which, they note, was "a stunning level of Democratic opposition to a bill that typically sees one or two defectors." And the Democrats "cited concerns with the overall defense spending hike," according to Reilly and Adragna.
Reilly and Adragna detail the specific points that House lawmakers are arguing over, including the "money woes" surrounding the bill.
"Democrats cited the nation's fiscal health in unsuccessfully arguing to reduce $150 billion from the topline, zero out $1 billion for the 'Trump-class' battleship and bar the use of funds for the war in Iran," according to Reilly and Adragna. "The votes were largely party-line, but at least one Democrat broke with their party on each."
The debate over the NDAA bill, Reilly and Adragna report, also found Georgia Republican Austin Scott expressing some "irritation" with Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth.
"Rep. Austin Scott (R-Ga.) vented that Hegseth has not offered lawmakers an explanation for his decision to block the promotions of several military officers," Reilly and Adragna explain. "The committee was debating an amendment that would allow only the president to overturn a military promotion board recommendation."
A frustrated Scott told fellow House lawmakers, "I would just suggest that if the secretary of defense wants to have a good relationship with the members of Congress, then perhaps he should be responsive."
One thing most of the lawmakers agreed on, however, is officially renaming the U.S. Department of Defense the U.S. Department of War — a request that the Pentagon, under Hegseth's direction, made in April. Rep. Ronny Jackson (R-Texas) is pushing for that renaming to become official, and according to Reilly and Adragna, lawmakers voted 29-27 in favor of Jackson's proposal.
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