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The American People Don’t Want a Bigger Military Budget 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. Cash for Votes Ilooked 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 arms industry donors last election cycle (2023–24). On average, members who voted to authorize $901 billion in military spending received four times as much money from military contractors as those opposed. (This four-to-one ratio between yes and no votes holds whether you take the mean or median for each group. The chart below refers to the mean.) I can’t imagine you’re surprised by the results. I’m not surprised, either: I’ve run this analysis since 2018 and found the same correlation — politicians voting to increase military spending taking more money from military contractors — every single year. Considering the share of military contractors’ revenue from the US government, much of the money they give members of Congress originally came from taxpayers. Arms companies are recycling funds back to the people who signed off on that funding in the first place, helping ensure that Congress doesn’t represent public opinion on how federal dollars should be allocated. Military spending doesn’t just buy weapons, it buys a way of life. https://jacobin.com/2025/12/us-military-budget-trump-defense Back |
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