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124 Dems oppose historically bipartisan defense bill over restrictions on transgender treatments for minors

The House voted Wednesday to pass an annual defense bill that gives enlisted soldiers significant pay increases and eliminates the DEI program. Pentagon.

The bill passed 281-140, with 16 Republicans voting no. Only 81 Democrats voted for it, and 124 voted against it, a much larger margin than in years past when the bill had bipartisan support.

Many Democratic lawmakers opposed provisions in the bill that would limit coverage of transgender treatment for minors.

The bill now heads to the Senate for passage and then to President Joe Biden's desk for his signature.

The 1,800-page bill, known as the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA), details how the $895.2 billion earmarked for defense and national security will be spent. A vote is expected to take place more than two months after the start of the fiscal year.

The $895.2 billion represents a 1% increase over last year's budget and is a smaller number than some defense hawks had hoped.

A large portion of the bill focuses on improving the quality of life for military personnel during record times. Recruitment issueswhich has been the focus of much bipartisan discussion over the last year. This includes a 14.5% pay increase for enlisted soldiers, expanded access to child care for military personnel, and job assistance for military spouses.

The House voted Wednesday to pass an annual defense bill that would give significant pay increases to enlisted soldiers and eliminate the Department of Defense's DEI program. (Daniel Slim/AFP via Getty Images)

Under this measure, all military personnel will be granted a flat 4.5% pay increase starting January 1st.

The NDAA typically enjoys broad bipartisan support, but this year's focus on eliminating “woke” policies may make it hard for Democrats to swallow.

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A policy proposal to ban military health care provider Tricare from covering transgender services for minor dependents of service members has raised concerns and led to Washington, D.C., the ranking Democrat on the House Armed Services Committee. Representative Adam Smith urged them to reconsider their support. for the bill.

“It is wrong to simply deny medical care to people who clearly need it just because there is prejudice against transgender people,” he said in a statement. “This provision injected a level of partisanship not seen in previous defense bills.”

The purpose of this provision is to prevent “medical intervention that could lead to sterilization” of minors.

The U.S. Capitol dome seen from a perch in Washington, D.C. (Photo by Emma Woodhead, Fox News Digital)

The bill now heads to the Senate for passage and then to President Joe Biden's desk for his signature. (Fox News Digital)

President Biden speaks with members of the 82nd Airborne Division at G2A Arena in Jasionka, Poland, Friday, March 25, 2022. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

The bill included a 14.5 percent pay increase for enlisted soldiers. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

Other provisions, such as a complete ban on funding for adult gender reassignment surgeries, were not included in the bill, nor was a ban on mandatory mask-wearing to prevent the spread of disease.

This bill is National Guard to the southern border to help apprehend illegal immigrants and divert drugs.

Another provision would open the door to allowing Airmen and Space Force members to grow beards. The bill directs the Secretary of the Air Force to brief lawmakers on the “feasibility and appropriateness” of establishing a pilot program that allows facial hair.

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Democrats are also upset that the bill did not include a provision to expand access to IVF for military personnel. Currently, military health insurance only covers IVF for soldiers whose infertility is related to a service-related illness or injury.

But the bill did not include an amendment that would have repealed a provision that would have allowed the Department of Defense to reimburse service members who must travel out of state to obtain an abortion.

The bill would extend the hiring freeze for DEI-related roles and halt all such hiring until a “study of the Department of Defense's DEI program” is completed.

It also prohibits the Pentagon from contracting with advertising companies that “blacklist conservative news sources,” according to one report. GOP internal memo.

According to the memo, the NDAA will also cut funding to the Biden administration's Counterextremism Task Force, which focuses on eliminating extremism in the military. The annual defense policy bill also does not authorize “any climate change program” and prohibits the Department of Defense from issuing climate impact-based guidance for weapons systems.

House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-Louisiana) touted the bill's savings of $31 billion by cutting “inefficient programs, outdated weapons, and bloated Department of Defense bureaucracy.”

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The NDAA bill, a compromise negotiated between Republican and Democratic leaders, would set policy for the nation's largest government agency, but a separate defense spending bill would have to be passed to allocate funding for such a program. There is.

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