Democrats’ hopes of passing a major defense spending bill before the Thanksgiving recess died this week, leaving the future of the National Defense Authorization Act and a number of major proposals unclear.
With the Senate out until Dec. 9 and only a few days left to work out the differences with the House’s bill, prospects for a compromise on the $625 billion bill are uncertain. If Congress fails to pass it for the first time in 52 years — just as it gears up for yet another budget showdown — more than just fighter jets will be affected.
The most high-profile consequence of legislative failure can already be seen. The current impasse threatens months of work done by Democratic senators to address the problem of sexual assault in the military. A vote on two amendments was originally expected to take place on Wednesday but was ultimately derailed when Oklahoma Sen. Jim Inhofe blocked it and demanded the Senate consider a list of amendments, some of them related to issues like Iran sanctions, that would have slowed progress on the bill even further. Inhofe repeated this demand on Thursday, saying he would not support moving the bill forward without that assurance.
New York Democratic Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand’s Military Justice Improvement Act would have taken serious crimes such as sexual assault out of the chain of command and placed decision-making authority over the pursuit of sexual assault cases with prosecutors. The future of a separate amendment — offered by Missouri Democratic Sen. Claire McCaskill — under debate this week is also in doubt. And an amendment proposed by California Democratic Sen. Barbara Boxer that would change the process for court martial preliminary hearings, called Article 32 hearings, is also in danger.
This year’s NDAA still includes several major changes to current Pentagon policy on military sexual assault. Reforms proposed by McCaskill and backed by Senate Armed Services Committee chair Carl Levin, of Michigan, would ensure that commanders will no longer be able to unilaterally overturn jury convictions, and retaliation against individuals who report a sexual assault will now be a crime.
If the NDAA is not approved, only the reforms announced by the Pentagon – which have been sharply criticized by advocates — will go into effect.









