{"id":1159,"date":"2025-10-26T20:00:00","date_gmt":"2025-10-26T21:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/globaltalentholding.com\/?p=1159"},"modified":"2025-10-28T12:45:18","modified_gmt":"2025-10-28T12:45:18","slug":"congress-under-the-gun-on-military-pay-as-trumps-8-billion-dries-up","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/globaltalentholding.com\/index.php\/2025\/10\/26\/congress-under-the-gun-on-military-pay-as-trumps-8-billion-dries-up\/","title":{"rendered":"Congress under the gun on military pay as Trump's $8 billion dries up"},"content":{"rendered":"
Time is running out to find the next solution to get service members paid<\/a> during the government shutdown, as the $8 billion the Trump administration found to cover troops\u2019 paychecks is due to run out at the end of the month.<\/p>\n After Senate Democrats sank a vote Thursday<\/a> on Sen. Ron Johnson\u2019s (R-Wis.) bill to pay active-duty military personnel and federal employees required to work during the shutdown, troops, sailors and Air Force members\u00a0may not receive their\u00a0Oct. 31 paycheck.<\/p>\n Now, with the shutdown into its fourth week and no end in sight, the administration will need to figure out where to pull additional funds from if it wants its forces to be paid, should Congress fail to come up with a solution in time.<\/p>\n \u201cWhile I am grateful President Trump paid service members thus far, I am concerned that money will run out by the end of October and our military won\u2019t get paid on time,\u201d said Rep. Jen Kiggans (R-Va.), a former Navy helicopter pilot who last month introduced a stand-alone military pay bill, the Pay Our Troops Act. The bill has made little movement.<\/p>\n Trump on Oct. 11 directed Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth to pay service members<\/a>\u2019 midmonth paychecks by using $8 billion in previously appropriated Pentagon funds meant for research, development, test and evaluation (RDT&E). <\/p>\n But that pay cycle cost roughly $6.5 billion, leaving only $1.5 billion leftover for the looming Oct. 31 payday, which is expected to cost $6 billion to $7 billion, according to Todd Harrison, a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute.<\/p>\n \u201cMy understanding is that the initial money pulled from the RDT&E account was only sufficient to cover the Oct. 15th payroll,\u201d he told The Hill.<\/p>\n Harrison said there are plenty of other accounts with carryover funding from previous years that Pentagon leadership can tap to keep the pay flowing for months, but at the end of the day, \u201cthey are just robbing Peter to (literally) pay Paul,\u201d he said. \u201cOnce funding is restored, they will need to move this money back into the accounts it came from.\u201d<\/p>\n The Pentagon did not respond to a request for comment from The Hill as to whether officials have identified any other payroll sources.<\/p>\n The upcoming deadline appears to have lawmakers on both sides of the aisle worried, after senators voted 54-45 against advancing legislation from Johnson that would have guaranteed pay for essential federal workers, including members of the military, during the government shutdown.<\/p>\n Georgia’s Democratic Sens.\u00a0Jon Ossoff\u00a0and\u00a0Raphael Warnock\u00a0joined Sen.\u00a0John Fetterman\u00a0(D-Pa.) in breaking ranks<\/a> in voting for the Republican bill, known as the Shutdown Fairness Act, which needed 60 votes to move forward.<\/p>\n Though federal employees are guaranteed back pay once the government reopens, the bill would have given some relief to federal workers going without pay before that happens.<\/p>\n But Democrats \u2014 who have held firm in demanding that Republicans extend soon-to-expire Affordable Care Act subsidies and negotiate an end to the shutdown with them \u2014 saw the bill as extending the shutdown by taking pressure off Republicans to negotiate.<\/p>\n Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer (N.Y.) on Thursday called Johnson\u2019s bill \u201ca ruse,\u201d warning it would give the White House too much power to determine which federal workers get paid and which remain furloughed.<\/p>\n \u201cWe will not give Donald Trump a license to play politics with people\u2019s livelihoods,\u201d Schumer said.<\/p>\n