Defense Contractors Quietly Buying Influence on the NDAA Through PAC Dollars
Defense firms channel millions into congressional circles, aligning policy with profit while taxpayers foot the bill.
The unmistakable aroma of lobbyist cologne wafts through Capitol Hill corridors as defense contractors discreetly funnel nearly $5 million into the pockets of key lawmakers. According to a Defense News report, these contributions from PACs and individuals in the defense sector are squarely aimed at the architects of the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA). It’s a well-rehearsed dance where money whispers louder than constituent voices.
Let’s talk numbers. Congressmen Rep. Ken Calvert, Rep. Adam Smith, and Rep. Mike Rogers lead the parade, collecting sums that could make a lottery winner blush—around $200,000, $130,000, and $68,000, respectively. Notably, Rogers’ campaign fund got a $7,000 cherry on top from Palmer Luckey, the defense-tech mogul known for making virtual realities a bit too real.
Why should you care about these cash flows? Because they’re greasing the skids for legislation like the SPEED Act, which seeks to put defense acquisition on a deregulation fast track. It’s a roadmap to less oversight, leaving procurement as transparent as a poker player’s bluff.
Rep. Brian Mast lent his hand to the legislative potluck with a proposal linking loans to foreign arms sales. It’s a recipe intentionally seasoned to benefit those holding the wallet strings. Meanwhile, oversight retreats faster than a beleaguered mascot on a slippery stadium field. The Department of Defense Inspector General’s audits have spotlighted contractor overbilling; yet here we are, ready to tear down what little scrutiny remains.
The risks are real. We’re talking about service members potentially equipped with weapons put together under the philosophy of ‘good enough,’ all while taxpayers shoulder the bloated invoices. The Office of the Director, Operational Test and Evaluation (DOT&E) waves the caution flag, warning of what could happen if oversight continues its disappearing act.
So, taxpayers, grab your calculators. This isn’t just a Capitol Hill shuffle; it’s your money playing duck-and-cover in a game of political influence. When private cash pries open public wallets, you have to wonder who’s getting a bargain—and who’s getting swindled.
In this murky tale of influence-peddling, the moral remains clear though obscure—the invoice has been signed and stamped, but did anyone bother to read the fine print?
Sources
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