The Bush administration and congressional Democrats are at odds over a pay hike for U.S. troops. Take a wild guess who “supports our troops” more.
Troops don’t need bigger pay raises, White House budget officials said Wednesday in a statement of administration policy laying out objections to the House version of the 2008 defense authorization bill.
The Bush administration had asked for a 3 percent military raise for Jan. 1, 2008, enough to match last year’s average pay increase in the private sector. The House Armed Services Committee recommends a 3.5 percent pay increase for 2008, and increases in 2009 through 2012 that also are 0.5 percentage point greater than private-sector pay raises.
The slightly bigger military raises are intended to reduce the gap between military and civilian pay that stands at about 3.9 percent today. Under the bill, HR 1585, the pay gap would be reduced to 1.4 percent after the Jan. 1, 2012, pay increase.
Bush budget officials said the administration “strongly opposes” both the 3.5 percent raise for 2008 and the follow-on increases, calling extra pay increases “unnecessary.”
The administration’s position is outlined in a Statement of Administration Policy (.pdf), which “strongly opposes” an additional 0.5% increase in troops’ pay, an additional $40 per month for widows of slain soldiers, additional benefits for surviving family members of civilian employees, and price controls for prescription drugs under TRICARE (the military’s health care plan for military personnel and their dependents).
And then there’s the Democrats’ approach.
“We ask our troops to risk their lives for our nation,” said Democratic Caucus Chairman Rahm Emanuel. “We ask their spouses to raise families and make ends meet without them as they serve. The President is a lot of talk when it comes to supporting the troops and their families. It’s easy to say you support our troops, but actions matter and when it comes to the treatment of our troops and their families, our resources must match our rhetoric.”
Now, the administration has said, in writing, that it “strongly opposes” these additional benefits, but Dems would be crazy to back down in the face of complaints.
Show of hands: who thinks the president would veto the 2008 defense authorization bill because it was too generous to troops and their families in a time of war?