US lawmakers voted Wednesday after fraught negotiations to move forward with a contentious 2025 defense budget that raises troops’ pay but blocks funding of gender-affirming care for some transgender children of service members.
The centerpiece of the $884 billion National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) — which was green-lit by the Republican-led House of Representatives but still needs Senate approval — is a 14.5 percent pay increase for junior enlisted service members and 4.5 percent for other personnel.
But talks over the 1,800-page-plus text were complicated by a last-minute Republican intervention to prevent the military’s health program from covering gender-affirming care for children of service members if it results in “sterilization.”
“Citizens don’t want their tax dollars to go to this, and underaged people often regret these surgeries later in life,” Nebraska Republican Don Bacon told CNN. “It’s a bad hill to die on for Democrats.”
Gender-affirming health care for children is just one of multiple fronts in the so-called “culture wars” that polarize US politics and divide the country, with Republicans using the issue as a cudgel against Democrats in November’s elections.
The funding block angered progressives, and prompted the top Democrat on the House Armed Services Committee to come out against the legislation.
“As I said a few days ago, blanketly denying health care to people who need it — just because of a biased notion against transgender people — is wrong,” Adam Smith, who represents a district in Washington state, said in a statement.
“The inclusion of this harmful provision puts the lives of children at risk and may force thousands of service members to make the choice of continuing their military service or leaving to ensure their child can get the health care they need.”
Smith slammed House Speaker Mike Johnson for pandering to “the most extreme elements of his party” by including the transgender provision.
The must-pass NDAA — a bill that Congress has sent to the president’s desk without fail every year since 1961 — cleared the chamber in a 281-140 vote and now moves to the Senate, with final passage expected next week.
The topline figure is one percent above last year’s total and, with funding from other sources, brings the total defense budget to just under $900 billion.
Some foreign policy hawks on the Republican side of the Senate wanted $25 billion more for the Pentagon but they are still expected to support the bill.
“The safety and security of the American people is our top priority, and this year’s NDAA ensures our military has the resources and the capabilities needed to remain the most powerful fighting force on the planet,” Johnson told reporters.