GOP mulls limiting Defense bill changes
The Republican House leadership is considering bringing the
Defense Appropriations bill to the floor under a process that would limit the amendments that could be offered to the spending bill, Defense and
congressional sources told The Hill.
{mosads}The leadership is weighing a structured rule for the Defense
bill in order to stop controversial amendments on issues like the National Security Agency, Egypt
and Syria, due to concerns that amendments could overly restrict the
administration or wind up being used in campaign attack ads, according to defense sources with knowledge of the deliberations.
“They’re concerned about attempts to defund the NSA spying
programs or tie the president’s hands in Syria and now Egypt as well,” said
one defense industry source.
Limiting amendments to the Defense bill would mark a change for
the House appropriations process since Republicans took back control in 2011,
as nearly all of the spending bills — including Defense — are considered with an open rule where anyone can
offer amendments.
It would also be a blow to Speaker John Boehner’s (R-Ohio) pledge
to return the House to “regular order,” which was being criticized on Thursday as
a new farm bill was quickly brought to the floor.
Defense Appropriations subcommittee chairman Bill Young
(R-Fla.) confirmed that leadership was considering limiting amendments to the Defense bill, although he said no decision had been made.
“I believe that legislation should come under open rule, but
I understand the leadership’s concern, and if that’s what they decide, we’ll
work with that,” Young told The Hill.
A spokeswoman for House Appropriations Chairman Hal Rogers
(R-Ky.) said that the Defense bill is “a critical piece of legislation that
must be completed in a timely fashion.”
“The committee understands that an exception to a completely
open rule on appropriations bills may be made in this case, but does not
support it as a precedent,” said Rogers spokeswoman Jennifer Hing.
When a bill is brought to the floor using a structured rule
rather than an open rule, the Rules Committee must approve all amendments
before they can come to the floor.
The Defense Appropriations bill is always a contentious
affair on the floor, with debates on everything from Guantánamo detainees to funding the
wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
The 2014 Defense Appropriations bill passed in committee last month, and
defense sources said that typically, it would have already gone to the floor.
But the bill was approved amid a furor from some in Congress over
the NSA spying program, and also as the White House said
it would begin providing military aid to Syrian rebels.
The ouster of Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi — and the
ensuing debate over whether the U.S. should suspend $1.5 billion in aid because
Morsi was ousted by the Egyptian military — has only added to the list of prickly defense issues.
During debate over the Defense authorization bill, which
also had a structured rule, the Rules Committee rejected amendments from both
Democrats and Republicans that would have restricted the NSA surveillance
programs.
Young said that the Defense spending bill could be brought
to the floor as early as next week, though he said there were other issues that
might bump it further back on the calendar.
The Defense bill was one of five appropriations bills that
Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-Va) said could come to the floor in July in a memo to GOP lawmakers last week.
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