S-4537-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Armed Services.
What it does
This bill would repeal the Military Selective Service Act, eliminating the legal framework for mandatory draft registration and the Selective Service System itself. It would transfer the agency's assets, records, and unexpended funds to the General Services Administration within 180 days, and help its employees find other federal positions. Critically, it would also wipe out all existing penalties — federal and state — for people who previously failed to register, and would bar any government entity from using past non-registration as a basis for denying benefits, employment, or a finding of poor moral character.
Who benefits
Men aged 18–25 who are currently required to register, and future cohorts who would no longer face that obligation. The estimated 100,000–200,000 men per year who fail to register (and the millions who have historically failed to register) would have past penalties and disqualifications erased. Immigrants — including unauthorized immigrants — who were previously barred from federal benefits or naturalization for non-registration would benefit from the amnesty provisions. Libertarian and civil liberties advocates who oppose compelled government registration. Conscientious objectors, whose existing protections are explicitly preserved. Taxpayers, to the extent the Selective Service System's roughly $26 million annual budget is reduced or redirected.
Who is hurt
The U.S. military's ability to rapidly mobilize a large force in a national emergency would be reduced, as the draft registration database would no longer exist. Selective Service System employees would face job displacement, though the bill directs OPM to assist with transfers. States and localities that use registration status as a condition for driver's licenses, state financial aid, or public employment would lose that enforcement tool. Veterans' and national security organizations that view draft readiness as a strategic deterrent may view this as a loss. Women who have advocated for equal inclusion in draft registration — an ongoing legal and policy debate — would see that question rendered moot.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the all-volunteer military has met U.S. force requirements for over 50 years without a draft, making the Selective Service System an expensive bureaucratic relic. They contend that compelling young men to register under threat of criminal prosecution and denial of federal benefits — including student loans and federal jobs — is a coercive burden on a constitutional right to liberty, and that the system's $26 million annual cost produces no operational military value. They further argue the retroactive amnesty provision corrects a long-standing injustice, as millions of men — disproportionately low-income and minority — lost access to education and employment opportunities for failing to comply with a registration requirement that has never actually been used to induct anyone since 1973.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the Selective Service registration system provides a critical mobilization infrastructure that cannot be quickly rebuilt in a national emergency — the 2017 National Commission on Military, National, and Public Service found that eliminating it would degrade the nation's ability to rapidly expand military capacity. They contend that the relatively modest cost of maintaining draft readiness is a prudent insurance policy given an increasingly volatile global security environment, and that the retroactive amnesty provision — which also bars states from enforcing their own registration-linked laws — raises federalism concerns by preempting state policy choices. They further argue that repealing the system without a replacement framework leaves a structural gap in national defense planning that Congress has not adequately studied.