Donnelly to Help Negotiate Final National Defense Bill

July 11, 2018

Donnelly-Joe-in-office-Tuesday evening, U.S. Senator Joe Donnelly was named to the conference committee that will negotiate a final national defense bill. Last month, the  Senate passed the bipartisan national defense bill, which includes several provisions Donnelly led or supported to reinforce Indiana’s role in our national defense and to protect American security interests and U.S. defense-related jobs. The U.S. House of Representatives passed a different version in late May and the two versions must now be reconciled by the conference committee. The defense bill has been signed into law the last 56 consecutive years.

 

Donnelly, a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, said following passage of the Senate version of the national defense bill last month, “This bipartisan legislation would support our servicemembers and Indiana’s role in our national defense. It would protect American defense-related jobs and help strengthen the Pentagon’s efforts to combat opioid abuse. I look forward to working with the House to get this quickly to the president’s desk and give our servicemembers, their families, and our military’s leaders the ability to plan for the future.”

 

Background on provisions included in the Senate-passed version of the defense bill:

 

Regional Highlights:

Crane and Grissom

Notre Dame and Purdue

Ft. Wayne

 

Protecting American National Security Jobs

o    Donnelly fought to keep key technologies safe: Donnelly championed provisions that help fight to keep key sectors of our defense industrial base robust and secure from threats, such as tampering and counterfeit parts. Another Donnelly-supported provision would help ensure that companies that provide products crucial to our national defense are not purchased by a foreign adversary like China.

o    Donnelly helped make sure Hoosiers can compete fairly against foreign competitors: He successfully pushed for provisions that would ensure future Department of Defense procurement competitions aren’t unfairly tilted towards the foreign competition.

o    The Senate bill also includes a Donnelly-led provision expressing the sense of Congress that the Department of Defense contracts should be going to companies that primarily employ American workers and are not outsourcing American work.

 

Supporting American Servicemembers

o    Supporting National Guard mental health: At Donnelly’s request, the Senate bill would support the National Guard’s pilot program on mental health assessments. This builds on Donnelly’s Sexton Act, which for the first time requires annual mental health assessment for all active-duty and reserve servicemembers, as well as his ‘Care Package’ to improve access to mental health services for servicemembers and their families.

o    Helping servicemembers transition to civilian life: The Senate bill includes a provision that would support training necessary for servicemembers to successfully transition to civilian life at the end of their time in the military.

 

Other Notable Provisions: