Greene knocks Republicans, Democrats after all her defense funding amendments fail
The lower chamber advanced the legislation, which allocates about $832 billion in funding for Department of Defense programs for fiscal 2026 in a vote overnight.
Greene's amendment to cut funding for the Israeli Cooperative Program — an agreement through which the U.S. provides Israel $500 million for programs for missile defense — was spiked in a 6-422 vote.
The amendment garnered support from GOP Rep. Thomas Massie (Ky.) and a group of progressive Democrats: Reps. Al Green (Texas), Summer Lee (Pa.), Ilhan Omar (Minn.) and Rashida Tlaib (Mich.).
The Georgia Republican's amendment to bar funds in the bill from being used for assistance to Ukraine was also rejected in a 76-353 vote. All 76 lawmakers who backed the amendment were Republicans.
'Tonight all of my amendments to cut $1.6 billion of foreign aid out of our Defense budget failed because both Republicans and Democrats refuse to stop sending your hard earned tax dollars to foreign countries,' Greene wrote in a post on the social platform X.
'For example, $118 million to foreign countries for disaster relief like floods that haven't even happened yet,' the lawmaker added. 'And $15 million for AIDS education activities for soldiers in Africa. I mean can't they figure that out by now? And my amendment to stop sending money to Ukraine. Yep that one failed too.'
She warned that the U.S. is '$37 TRILLION in debt and Congress will never ever fix it because they will never ever stop the insane out of control spending that drives inflation up and makes your life unaffordable.'
The House passed the overall defense funding bill in a 221-209 vote. Three Republicans opposed it, while five Democrats joined the rest of the GOP lawmakers in getting the bill over the hump.
The legislation bolsters funding for active, reserve, and National Guard service members by $6.6 billion over the current funding levels. If signed into law, basic pay for military personnel would increase by 3.8 percent starting next year. The bill also secured $174 billion for procurement and $283 billion for operation and maintenance, among other measures.
It marks only the second appropriations bill Republicans have advanced for fiscal 2026, as efforts to pass the now-signed megabill of President Trump's spending and tax priorities took up much of the party's focus in recent months.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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