The American People Don’t Want a Bigger Military Budget

The House passed the 2026 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) on Wednesday last week, which authorizes $901 billion in military spending — $8 billion more than Donald Trump asked for. An additional $156 billion was included in the Big Beautiful Bill, so the NDAA’s passage signals congressional support not only for its many ugly provisions, but also for a $1 trillion-plus military budget next year.

Historic increases in military spending like the one authorized by the NDAA enable Trump’s foreign policy and practically define his domestic agenda. Money is policy. If you oppose war with Venezuela, occupations of US cities, or a historic transfer of public wealth to private companies partly paid for by cuts to social programs, you vote against the NDAA. If you’re fine with or get excited about those things, you vote for the bill.

recommended that members of Congress oppose the bill. Only a quarter of them did: the bill passed by a 312-112 margin.

If congressional votes reflected public opinion, the bill wouldn’t have passed. Only one in ten voters want a bigger military budget, but more than seven in ten House members voted for one on Wednesday.

The discrepancy is illustrated in the following graph. Each pair of bars compares public opinion on military spending and House votes on the same issue. The percentages are the share of voters who support increasing military spending and the share of House members who voted to authorize one through the NDAA.

On one hand, Republicans overwhelmingly voted for the NDAA, and are further out of step with the views of their base than their House counterparts. On the other hand, the bill wouldn’t have passed without the support of Democrats, who just handed a trillion-dollar military budget to a guy they’ve called authoritarian for the past decade.

I looked at the money behind the 424 House votes on the NDAA. Specifically, I compared how each House member voted with the amount they accepted from…

La suite est à lire sur: jacobin.com
Auteur: Stephen Semler

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