HR-8595-119
Placed on the Union Calendar, Calendar No. 547.
Sponsored by Mario Diaz-Balart (R-FL)
What it does
This bill would appropriate federal funds for national security programs, the Department of State, and related programs for fiscal year 2027 (October 1, 2026 through September 30, 2027). As a standard annual appropriations bill, it would set spending levels for defense, diplomacy, and foreign affairs activities. The full text of specific funding amounts and programmatic riders has not been provided, so precise dollar figures and policy provisions cannot be detailed here.
Who benefits
Active-duty military personnel, veterans, and their families who depend on funded programs. Defense contractors and their employees who receive federal contracts. Foreign service officers and State Department civilian employees whose salaries and operations are funded. U.S. allies and partner nations that receive foreign assistance or security cooperation funding. International organizations and NGOs that receive State Department grants. Domestic communities near military installations whose local economies depend on defense spending.
Who is hurt
Taxpayers who bear the cost of the appropriated spending. Programs or agencies that receive reduced funding compared to prior years or their budget requests. Foreign aid recipients whose programs may be cut or restructured. Competing domestic discretionary programs that may face trade-offs in overall budget negotiations. Countries or organizations whose assistance is restricted by policy riders that may be attached to the bill.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that annual appropriations for national security and diplomacy are essential to maintaining U.S. military readiness, deterring adversaries, and sustaining alliances that have kept major-power conflict at bay for decades. They contend that funding the State Department alongside defense reflects a "whole of government" approach, where diplomacy can prevent conflicts that would cost far more in lives and treasure than the appropriated amounts.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that national security appropriations bills have historically grown year over year, contributing to structural federal deficits without sufficient accountability for how funds are spent. They contend that large omnibus-style spending packages often contain policy riders and earmarks that bypass normal legislative scrutiny, and that the scale of defense and foreign affairs spending crowds out domestic priorities without a rigorous cost-benefit review.