War Supplemental Clears Congress
Louis | Jul 28, 2010 |Two months after the Senate first passed their version of the war supplemental, the House passed the final version of the bill yesterday, 308-114. Now all that stands between the military and a delicious $37.1 billion is the stroke of President Obama’s pen, coming in the next few days.
We’ve reported on this bill twice already, tracking its progress through Congress.
A quick recap:
The Senate version of the bill, passed May 27, contained $58.8 billion in spending, including $37.1 billion for the war, over $13 billion for Vietnam veterans exposed to Agent Orange, $5.1 billion for FEMA, and $2.9 billion for Haiti disaster relief, as well as a host of smaller expenditures.
The House then passed its version of the bill on July 1, which accepted the Senate version while adding $22.8 billion in spending fully offset by $23.5 billion in cuts and law modifications. This included a $10 billion education jobs fund, $1 billion for youth summer jobs, $5 billion in Pell grants, $4.6 billion to settle two class-action lawsuits, and $701 million for border security.
What the $33 billion War Supplemental Has Become
Louis | Jul 01, 2010 |Over the past several months, Defense Secretary Robert Gates and others have urged Congress to pass a $33 billion supplemental spending request to continue funding the ongoing wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. In recent weeks, the tone of the rhetoric has intensified, with Gates warning that the military may have to start doing “stupid things” if the supplemental is not passed by the upcoming July 4th recess. Even General David Petraeus has weighed in on the issue in recent days, urging the House to pass the bill during his Senate confirmation hearing on Tuesday.
Reversing the usual pattern, the Senate passed its version of the bill on May 27, but the bill has stalled in the House, largely due to two concurrent factors:
1) Large-scale defections of Democratic representatives who do not wish to go on record as having voted for more war funding, and;
2) Republican resistance to billions in spending that has been tacked on to the bill for programs unrelated to the war. These include aid to Haiti, other disaster relief funds, disability payments to veterans, and much more.
Congress won’t make its July 4 deadline for a conference agreement, but the House hopes to pass its version of the bill later today. In the final scramble, the bill is changing by the hour, but as of June 30 it had ballooned to nearly $75 billion.
(Highlights of the bill after the jump)


