The Senate Armed Services Committee thinks its version of the annual policy-shaping National Defense Authorization Act (NSAA) could pass the upper chamber before the Fourth of July holiday, a committee aide confirmed Monday afternoon.
Politico reported Monday that the GOP-controlled panel plans to mark up its version of the bill the week of June 8. Unlike the House, which marks up its iteration of the annual legislation in a marathon open markup, the Senate typically speeds through the process behind closed doors.
The NDAA sets policy and spending limits for defense programs, including nuclear weapons programs managed outside the Pentagon by the Department of Energy’s National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA). The bill also authorizes funding for most of the legacy nuclear-weapon cleanup managed by DOE’s Office of Environmental Management.
The NNSA has requested a nearly $20 billion budget for fiscal 2021, which would be a 20% increase from its current appropriation. The ask for the budget year beginning Oct. 1 is a sharp revision upward from the budget projections the agency offered a year ago in its annual budget request. It required the Navy to request funding for one Virginia-class attack submarine in 2021, instead of two, to give the NNSA a raise.
The House Armed Services Committee still had not scheduled the full markup of its NDAA, at deadline Monday. Committee Chairman Adam Smith (D-Wash.) once hoped to have at least the pre-mark language finished this month.
“The legislative language for the FY21 NDAA will be made public when the subcommittee and Chairman’s marks are released,” a committee spokesperson wrote in an email Monday. “Mark up hearings will be scheduled once we receive a floor date from House Leadership.”
The Senate returned to Washington, D.C., last week after an extended recess due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The House has not yet reconvened.
Last week, House Armed Services Committee Ranking Member Mac Thornberry (R-Texas) said that any financial aid to help the defense industry mitigate the effects of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic response should be in addition to funds authorized in the 2021 NDAA. That position could put him at odds with Smith.
Thornberry favors maxing out the 2021 NDAA to $740 billion: the level approved by Congress and the White House last year in a bipartisan budget agreement that did away with the final two years of sequestration cuts from 2011.