By Patricia Zengerle and Julia Harte
WASHINGTON, Dec 6 (Reuters) – U.S. lawmakers on Sunday unveiled an annual defense policy bill that would authorize a record $901 billion in national security spending next year, billions more than President Donald Trump’s request, and provide $400 million in military assistance to Ukraine.
The massive 3,000-page bill includes a 4% increase for enlisted troops but rules out a bipartisan effort to spur housing construction that some lawmakers had hoped to include in the final bill.
House Speaker Mike Johnson, Republican of Louisiana, said in a statement that the legislation would advance Trump’s agenda by “ending the woke ideology in the Pentagon, securing the border, revitalizing the defense industrial base, and restoring the warrior ethos.”
The measure is a compromise between versions of the National Defense Authorization Act passed earlier this year by the Senate and the House of Representatives, both controlled by Trump’s fellow Republicans.
Trump in May asked Congress for a national defense budget of $892.6 billion for fiscal year 2026, flat compared to 2025 spending. That includes funding for the Department of Defense, as well as other agencies and programs involved with security and defense.
The House bill set spending at that level, but the Senate had authorized $925 billion.
The NDAA authorizes Pentagon programs, but does not fund them. Congress must pass the funding separately in a spending bill for the fiscal year ending in September 2026.
In addition to the typical NDAA provisions on buying military equipment and strengthening competitiveness with rivals such as China and Russia, this year’s bill focuses on scaling back programs championed by Trump, such as diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives, and deploying troops to the US’s southwest border to intercept immigrants and undocumented drugs.
It also repeals two resolutions authorizing the use of military force in Iraq in 1991 and 2002.
Considered “must-pass” legislation, the massive NDAA is one of the few major pieces of legislation that Congress passes each year and lawmakers are proud to have passed it every year for more than six decades.
The bill typically emerges after Republican and Democratic lawmakers negotiate for weeks behind closed doors. But the process this year was much more partisan than usual.
Some Democrats had threatened to block the measure on the use of the military by Trump in US cities, until Republican Senator Roger Wicker, chairman of the Armed Services Committee, agreed to hold a hearing this week on the matter.
Earlier this year, Republicans defeated Democratic efforts to block the deployment of the military to American cities and to stop the conversion of a luxury jet donated by Qatar to serve as Air Force One.
(Reporting by Patricia Zengerle and Julia Harte; Editing by Sergio Non and Diane Craft)