Government & Politics

Senate passes veto-proof Defense bill that will remove Confederate names from Army bases

The U.S. Senate Thursday passed with a veto-proof majority a Defense spending bill that includes a provision to remove the names of Confederate officers from 10 military bases.

All four senators from Kansas and Missouri backed National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) including Missouri Republican Sen. Josh Hawley, who had vehemently opposed language requiring Fort Bragg in North Carolina and other Confederate-name bases to be renamed.

Hawley lambasted the provision, drafted by Massachusetts Democratic Sen. Elizabeth Warren, as an effort to erase history and a veiled attack on President Donald Trump’s supporters. He offered his own amendment to strip out the renaming requirement and instead establish a commission to consider input from local stakeholders before bases could be renamed.

Hawley’s amendment did not make it onto the final bill or even receive a vote by the full Senate after Rhode Island Democratic Sen. Jack Reed earlier this month objected to it, Hawley’s office told The Star.

The annual NDAA authorizes the nation’s military spending for the next fiscal year. President Donald Trump has threatened veto a version that renames the military bases, but that looks less likely after the Senate passed its version 86 to 14, well above the two-thirds majority needed to override a veto.

Hawley’s office said the senator did not want to hold the up the legislation, which includes funding for Missouri’s military bases among other priorities, but said he would continue to press the issue as the House and Senate negotiate a final version to send to the president’s desk.

“Senator Hawley wants to see the process move forward. He secured multiple Missouri initiatives and priorities in the Senate NDAA package. But he stands by his amendment and would like to see the final legislation reflect his proposal,” said Kelli Ford, Hawley’s spokeswoman.

Missouri Republican Sen. Roy Blunt also backed the bill along with Kansas GOP Sens. Pat Roberts and Jerry Moran. It includes a provision from Moran, the Senate Veterans Affairs chairman, that ensures women in the National Guard and military reserves can take 12 weeks of maternity leave without being penalized on their retirement.

The U.S. House passed its own version of the bill earlier this week by a bipartisan vote of 295 to 125. It includes language from Missouri Rep. Vicky Hartzler aimed at reducing the military’s reliance on pharmaceutical products from China.

Hartzler supported the bill, noting the $40 million included for a hospital replacement project at Fort Leonard Wood among other Missouri priorities. The two chambers will now confer on a final version of the NDAA to send to the president.

However, several Republicans in the region were among the no votes, including Missouri Republican Reps. Jason Smith and Billy Long, and every Kansas Republican in the House— Reps. Roger Marshall, Steve Watkins and Ron Estes. The remaining Republicans and every Democrat from the region backed the House bill.

Marshall, who is locked in a tough primary race for U.S. Senate, issued a comment on his no vote Friday morning three days after The Star first asked and a day after publication.

Marshall cited a reduction of overall defense spending and the inclusion of “leftwing LGBT agenda items totally unrelated to military activities,” such as a repeal of Trump’s controversial ban on transgender troops as the reasons for his vote.

“I always fight for more military funding and a stronger national defense, and I also pledged to protect life and our Second Amendment. This bill cut defense spending by 10 percent, which is more than double the disastrous cuts that occurred due to Obama’s sequestration, which decimated our military readiness,” Marshall said.

This story was originally published July 23, 2020 at 4:07 PM.

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Bryan Lowry
McClatchy DC
Bryan Lowry serves as politics editor for The Kansas City Star. He previously served as The Star’s lead political reporter and as its Washington correspondent. Lowry contributed to The Star’s 2017 project on Kansas government secrecy that was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize. Lowry also reported from the White House for McClatchy DC and The Miami Herald before returning to The Star to oversee its 2022 election coverage.
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