HR-9495-119
Placed on the Union Calendar, Calendar No. 621.
Sponsored by Ken Calvert (R-CA)
What it does
This bill would appropriate funds for the Department of Defense for fiscal year 2027 (October 1, 2026 – September 30, 2027). It would allocate money across five major categories: military personnel pay and benefits, operations and maintenance, weapons and equipment procurement, research and development, and revolving management funds. The bill covers all active-duty branches, reserve components, and the National Guard, and includes funding for programs such as counter-ISIS operations, environmental restoration at military sites, cooperative threat reduction, and a new "Golden Dome for America" missile defense fund.
Who benefits
Active-duty military personnel across all branches (Army, Navy, Marine Corps, Air Force, Space Force) who receive pay and benefits. Reserve and National Guard members. Defense contractors and shipbuilders who would receive procurement contracts. Workers in the defense industrial base, including shipyards, aerospace manufacturers, and ammunition plants. Communities near military installations that benefit from base operations spending. Foreign security forces receiving counter-ISIS training and equipment. Communities near formerly used defense sites that would receive environmental cleanup funding. Small businesses supported through APEX Accelerators ($65M earmarked). Defense research universities and laboratories receiving R&D funding.
Who is hurt
U.S. taxpayers who bear the cost of the appropriation. Competing federal priorities (non-defense discretionary programs) that may face pressure in the overall budget process. Foreign policy advocates who oppose military aid to certain partner forces. Environmental groups who may argue cleanup funding is insufficient relative to contamination levels. Defense contractors who do not win competitive bids. Domestic shipbuilding workers at yards not selected for major contracts. Allies and partners not designated for security cooperation funding.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that robust defense funding is essential to deter adversaries and maintain U.S. military readiness at a time of heightened global competition, pointing to ongoing conflicts in Europe and the Indo-Pacific. They contend that major procurement investments — including $56.7 billion for Navy shipbuilding, $74.8 billion for Air Force R&D, and $397 million for the Golden Dome missile defense initiative — directly address identified capability gaps against near-peer threats. They further argue that the bill's requirements for congressional notification before fund obligations and quarterly reporting on counter-ISIS spending preserve meaningful legislative oversight of executive military action.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill's total appropriation continues a pattern of defense spending growth that crowds out domestic priorities such as infrastructure, healthcare, and education, without sufficient evidence that additional spending produces proportional security gains. They contend that broad transfer authorities — allowing the Secretary of Defense to move funds between accounts with limited restriction — effectively delegate spending discretion to the executive branch in ways that reduce Congress's power of the purse. They further argue that provisions authorizing assistance to foreign forces with only 15-day notification windows give Congress inadequate time to review or object to potentially consequential military commitments abroad.