A new US$1 trillion (A$1.4 trillion) COVID-19 response package by Senate Republicans is supposed to give the government more weapons to battle the surging coronavirus pandemic. But GOP lawmakers have more than just the "invisible enemy" in mind.
The Republican measure includes billions for F-35 fighters, Apache helicopters and infantry carriers sought by Washington's powerful defence lobby. Overall, the proposal stuffs US$8 billion (A$11 billion) into Pentagon weapons systems built by defence contractors like Boeing, Lockheed Martin and General Dynamics — corporate titans that sit atop the Washington influence industry.
The bill, drafted by Senate Appropriations Committee Chair Richard Shelby, R-Ala., would deposit US$2.2 billion (A$3 billion) in Pentagon shipbuilding accounts, boost missile defence systems in California and Alaska and deliver about US$1.4 billion (A$1.95 billion) for C-130 transport planes and F-35 fighters manufactured by Lockheed Martin Corp. Some of the F-35s could be delivered to an Air National Guard unit in Montgomery, Alabama.
In several cases, Shelby proposes restoring cuts imposed by the administration that diverted almost US$4 billion (A$5.6 billion) to help pay for construction of President Donald Trump's border wall. The Pentagon won significant defence increases last year with passage of a budget agreement that erased automatic spending cuts known as sequestration.
The US$8 billion (A$11 billion) weapons procurement package is part of a US$29.4 billion (A$41 billion) defence portion of the GOP's US$1 trillion (A$1.4 trillion) coronavirus response measure, a White House-backed package released.
Providing that money now would help build headroom into the annual defence funding bill that Congress plans to write later this year.
The outlook for Shelby's proposed defence projects could be dim. Democrats slammed the add-ons, and Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky said on Tuesday that the final package should not stray from the coronavirus response.
The weapons bazaar galled Democrats whose votes will be required to pass the bill amid widespread divisions inside the Senate GOP conference on the measure. They are pressing items such as food aid and funding for mail-in voting.
"We are not going to be supporting anything that does not acknowledge the incredible hardship people are facing on food," said Sen. Debbie Stabenow, D-Mich.
"Did you see the states it goes to? Maine. Arizona. Kentucky — we have a list," said Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., naming states where Republicans are defending seats in the fall election.
The administration never officially asked for the defence funding. It instead delivered informal requests to the powerful lawmakers like Shelby who sit atop the defence funding panel, aides say. Even those informal requests left out the US$8 billion (A$11 billion) for items like planes, ships and missile defence systems, though the White House grew to embrace some of the items.
The weapons package grew to include US$1.1 billion (A$1.5 billion) to build Boeing Poseidon surveillance jets, manufactured in Washington and Kansas, with US$283 million (A394 million) more for the company's Army Apache helicopters, which are made in Mesa, Arizona.
Endangered GOP Sen. Martha McSally of Arizona has been pressing a US$650 million (A$907 million) project to replace the wings of A-10 Thunderbolt ground support aircraft, many of which are based at Davis-Monthan Air Force Base in Tucson. There's US$49 million ($68 million) for Navy sonobuoys, listening devices that can detect submarines that are likely to be manufactured in Florida, according to an analysis by Democratic staff aides requiring anonymity to share internal working documents.
"The defence industrial base — a lot of it's been eroded right now. A lot of people are off from work," Shelby said. "We've got a lot of suppliers involved in there." A Shelby spokesperson added that the country's defence industrial base is "essential to our economy and to the defence of our nation" and said the bill would support millions of jobs.
But further justification for the huge weapons procurement package — drawn in part from a Pentagon "unfunded priorities" wish list of items excluded from the official US$740 billion (A$1 trillion) or so defence budget — has been lacking. The measure doesn't say in many cases whether the money is going to buy additional aircraft and other weapons or provide additional money for existing contracts.
The Shelby measure would restore defence dollars that were diverted for border wall work, such as US$260 million (A$363 million) for a high-speed Navy transport ship to be built by Austal Ltd. in Mobile, Alabama. The Austal shipyard is also the most likely contractor for "four expeditionary medical ships."
Anniston, Alabama, is also a beneficiary, along with Lima, Ohio, of US$375 million (A$523 million) for Stryker Army combat vehicle upgrades. Shipyards in Mississippi and Maine would benefit from US$250 million (A$348 million) for shipbuilding industrial bases.
"They turned the appropriations portion of the bill into a spending spree on weapons systems and a new federal building designed to block competition to the president's hotel," said House Appropriations Committee Chair Nita Lowey, D-N.Y. "It's clear to me that amphibious ships don't feed hungry children."
The package includes US$1.8 billion to rebuild the FBI's headquarters in downtown Washington. The building is near the Trump International Hotel, and if the FBI moves the lot, it could be used to construct another hotel that would compete with Trump's. McConnell is moving to kill the idea after it attracted widespread media scrutiny and came under attack as unrelated to COVID-19.
Shelby is among the last of a brazen breed of veteran Senate appropriators who try to push the envelope to deliver for their states. He also appears to be more independent than his predecessor, the late Sen. Thad Cochran, R-Miss.
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