 

#  Congress Makes Progress on Appropriations, NDAA  

 





July 28, 2023

 

 

 Congress adjourned late yesterday for the August recess, capping a legislative session that included an agreement to suspend the debt limit in exchange for two years of capped discretionary spending, House and Senate passage of the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA), and progress in committee on the Fiscal Year 2024 (FY24) appropriations bills. Although some had hoped that the bipartisan agreement on topline spending levels would streamline the annual budget process, significant funding differences have emerged between and within the two bodies and political parties. In addition, hot-button issues, from support for Ukraine to abortion, climate, and diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI), have found their way into nearly every legislative debate, and there have been no discussions on how to bridge these differences before the end of the fiscal year on September 30, raising the specter of at least one continuing resolution and the possibility of a government shutdown.

 **FY24 Appropriations**

 For FY24, the debt limit agreement – known as the Fiscal Responsibility Act – set an overall discretionary spending cap of $1.59 trillion, which is nearly level with FY23 funding. Within that total, and after various budgetary transfers, defense spending receives approximately $886 billion (+3 percent) and nondefense spending receives $652 billion (-0.2 percent), although many Republicans and Democrats who voted for the deal in the Senate received assurances that emergency and supplemental support for Ukraine, natural disasters, defense, and other national priorities could be funded outside the caps. To encourage timely completion of the annual spending process, the deal also includes a novel trigger mechanism, which provides a 1 percent across-the-board cut if all 12 spending bills are not enacted into law by January 1, although it is not clear how this sequestration of funding will work or when it would actually kick in.

 The expectation was that the debt-limit agreement on spending levels would provide a common framework for the annual appropriations process that could speed consideration of the bills through the Congress. In the Senate, that has been the case thus far, with the Appropriations Committee drafting bipartisan bills at the agreed upon levels and even reaching agreement on the addition of $13.7 billion in supplemental funding, split $8 billion for defense and $5.7 billion for non-defense. The House, however, has taken a different path. Exploiting the narrow majority, conservative members in the Republican caucus have pressed for further reductions in funding of non-defense programs, leading leadership to instruct the Appropriations Committee to produce bills at FY22 levels, nearly $119 billion below the debt limit agreement. In recent weeks as the funding bills have moved from committee to the floor, they have continued to push for further deep cuts, undermining the support seemingly necessary for passage.

 In addition to the very low overall spending totals, House Republicans have protected funding priorities for veterans and homeland security, which has meant that cuts are concentrated in the remaining bills, such as the Labor-HHS-Education bill, which is reduced roughly 30 percent from FY23. Within this bill, many traditionally bipartisan, and leading university, priorities, have been cut, like NIH (-7.8 percent), and funding for K-12 schools that serve low-income students (-80 percent), and some, like Federal Work Study, the Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grants (SEOG), and the Agency for Healthcare Research &amp; Quality (AHRQ), have seen funding eliminated. Also, controversial policy riders have been added to the House’s partisan funding bills; nearly all include bans on DEI offices, programs and training, limits on funding and support for reproductive health and gender-affirming care, and provisions to setback or block various Administration climate initiatives. There are also specific proposals to ban federal funding for fetal tissue research, to restart the China Initiative at the Department of Justice, to block the Administration’s efforts to provide open access to federally funded research, and to stymie efforts promoting corporate ESG reporting.

 Given the divergent approaches of the House and Senate and the Administration’s opposition to the House bills, negotiations on final spending bills are expected to be very difficult and time will be short with a deadline of October 1 for the start of FY24 and Congress out of session all of August. It seems likely that leadership will work to pass a stopgap funding bill to provide more time for negotiations, but there is growing concern that objections from a small group of fiscal and social conservatives within the House Republican caucus could block this normally routine legislation and force a government shutdown. In addition, there is the risk of triggering the 1 percent across-the-board cut if the government is funded under a continuing spending resolution into the new year.

 The chart below this update provides details on preliminary FY24 funding levels for University priority areas.

 **The Remaining Fall Agenda**

 Lawmakers also continue work on other must-pass pieces of legislation, including the annual National Defense Authorization (NDAA), Federal Aviation Administration reauthorization, the Farm Bill, and an update of the Pandemic and All Hazards Preparedness Act. Of particular note, the NDAA has passed both the House and Senate but has a difficult road in conference. The House NDAA was loaded with hot-button political issues from DEI and CRT to abortion and transgender care and ultimately passed with almost no Democratic support, which is a rarity for this normally bipartisan bill. Beyond these controversial riders, both House and Senate bills recommend cuts to basic research at DOD, and the House includes research security provisions to restrict research collaborations with certain entities in China and Russia, enhances disclosures for DOD grant recipients, and bans so called gain-of-function research. Although the Senate does not include these provisions in its bill, it does establish a new notification regime for so-called “outbound investments” in China and other countries of concern, which could implicate institutional investors as well as university research collaborations. As with appropriations, the conference process to resolve the differences between the two bills could be lengthy and difficult, with final resolution of the NDAA possibly continuing late into the year.

 **Contact Us**

 As always, Harvard’s DC-based federal relations team remains closely engaged on the University’s priorities. If you have any questions, please feel free to reach out to Suzanne Day ([suzanne\_day@harvard.edu](mailto:///suzanne_day@harvard.edu)), Kara Haas ([kara\_haas@harvard.edu](mailto:///kara_haas@harvard.edu)), or Peter DeYoe ([peter\_deyoe@harvard.edu](mailto:///peter_deyoe@harvard.edu)).

 Sort    

  **Final FY23**

 

  **FY24 PBR**

 

  **FY24 PBR v FY23**

 

  **FY24 House Committee**

 

  **FY24 House v FY23**

 

  **FY24 Senate Committee**

 

  **FY24 Senate v FY23**

 

  

    

    **Total Discretionary Spending (trillions)**

 

  1.630

 

  1.695

 

  4.0%

 

  1.471

 

  -9.8%

 

  1.604

 

  -1.6%

 

  

    **Labor-HHS-Education (millions)**

 

  

  

  

  

  

  

  

  

    NIH – Total

 

  47459

 

  48598

 

  2.4%

 

  45100

 

  -7.8%

 

  47812

 

  0.7%

 

  

    ARPA-H

 

  1500

 

  2500

 

  66.7%

 

  500

 

  -66.7%

 

  1500

 

  0.0%

 

  

    AHRQ

 

  373.5

 

  403

 

  7.9%

 

  0

 

  -100.0%

 

  370.5

 

  -0.8%

 

  

    CDC

 

  9217.5

 

  10303

 

  11.8%

 

  7600

 

  -17.5%

 

  9198

 

  -0.2%

 

  

    Pell Grants (Discretionary Funding)

 

  22475

 

  22475

 

  0.0%

 

  22475

 

  0.0%

 

  22475

 

  0.0%

 

  

    Pell Grants (Max Grant - actual dollars)

 

  7395

 

  8215

 

  11.1%

 

  7395

 

  0.0%

 

  7645

 

  3.4%

 

  

    Work Study

 

  1230

 

  1230

 

  0.0%

 

  0

 

  -100.0%

 

  1220

 

  -0.8%

 

  

    SEOG

 

  910

 

  910

 

  0.0%

 

  0

 

  -100.0%

 

  900

 

  -1.1%

 

  

    TRIO

 

  1191

 

  1297.8

 

  9.0%

 

  1191

 

  0.0%

 

  1191

 

  0.0%

 

  

    GEAR UP

 

  388

 

  408

 

  5.2%

 

  388

 

  0.0%

 

  388

 

  0.0%

 

  

    Title VI

 

  85.7

 

  85.7

 

  0.0%

 

  35

 

  -59.2%

 

  85.7

 

  0.0%

 

  

    GAANN

 

  23.5

 

  24

 

  0.0%

 

  0

 

  -100.0%

 

  23.5

 

  0.0%

 

  

    Institute of Education Sciences

 

  807.6

 

  870.9

 

  7.8%

 

  707

 

  -12.5%

 

  793.1

 

  -1.8%

 

  

    Inst. Museum and Library Services

 

  294.8

 

  294.8

 

  0.0%

 

  294.8

 

  0.0%

 

  289.8

 

  -1.7%

 

  

    **Commerce-Justice-Science (millions)**

 

  

  

  

  

  

  

  

  

    NSF – Total

 

  9874\*

 

  11314

 

  14.6%

 

  9630.1

 

  -2.5%

 

  9500

 

  -3.8%

 

  

    NSF - Research and Related

 

  7629.3

 

  9029.9

 

  18.4%

 

  7866.6

 

  3.1%

 

  7608.3

 

  -0.3%

 

  

    NSF - Ed &amp; HR

 

  1246

 

  1444.2

 

  15.9%

 

  1006

 

  -19.3%

 

  1228

 

  -1.4%

 

  

    NASA – Total

 

  25383.7

 

  27200

 

  7.2%

 

  25366

 

  -0.1%

 

  25000.3

 

  -1.5%

 

  

    NASA - Science

 

  7795

 

  8260.8

 

  6.0%

 

  7380

 

  -5.3%

 

  7340.9

 

  -5.8%

 

  

    NIST – Total

 

  1627.3

 

  1632

 

  0.3%

 

  1477

 

  -9.2%

 

  1447.8

 

  -11.0%

 

  

    NIST - Scientific and Technical

 

  953

 

  994.9

 

  4.4%

 

  1020

 

  7.0%

 

  1021.3

 

  7.2%

 

  

    **Defense (millions)**

 

  

  

  

  

  

  

  

  

    Basic Research

 

  2920.7

 

  2446

 

  -16.3%

 

  2526.6

 

  -13.5%

 

  3224.7

 

  10.4%

 

  

    Applied Research

 

  7796.4

 

  5993

 

  -23.1%

 

  6730.4

 

  -13.7%

 

  7139.8

 

  -8.4%

 

  

    DARPA

 

  4060

 

  4388.4

 

  8.1%

 

  4123.3

 

  1.6%

 

  4092.6

 

  0.8%

 

  

    **Energy and Water (millions)**

 

  

  

  

  

  

  

  

  

    Office of Science - Total

 

  8100

 

  8800.4

 

  8.6%

 

  8100

 

  0.0%

 

  8430

 

  4.1%

 

  

    High Energy Physics

 

  1166

 

  1226

 

  5.1%

 

  1192.3

 

  2.3%

 

  1226

 

  5.1%

 

  

    Nuclear Physics

 

  805.2

 

  811

 

  0.7%

 

  800

 

  -0.6%

 

  818

 

  1.6%

 

  

    Basic Energy Sciences

 

  2534

 

  2693

 

  6.3%

 

  2587

 

  2.1%

 

  2679.3

 

  5.7%

 

  

    Biological and Envir. Research

 

  908.7

 

  932

 

  2.6%

 

  827

 

  -9.0%

 

  941

 

  3.5%

 

  

    ARPA-E

 

  470

 

  650.2

 

  38.3%

 

  470

 

  0.0%

 

  450.0

 

  -4.3%

 

  

    **Interior-Environment (millions)**

 

  

  

  

  

  

  

  

  

    NEA

 

  207

 

  211

 

  1.9%

 

  186.3

 

  -10.0%

 

  207

 

  0.0%

 

  

    NEH

 

  207

 

  211

 

  1.9%

 

  186.3

 

  -10.0%

 

  207

 

  0.0%

 

  

    EPA S&amp;T

 

  802.3

 

  967.8

 

  20.6%

 

  560.7

 

  -30.1%

 

  795

 

  -0.9%

 

  

  



 \*NSF received $335 million in supplemental funding in FY23, which was not included in the base amount for FY24.



 

 

 



 

 See also:- [ Budget and Appropriations ](/issues/budget-appropriations)
- [ Washington Updates ](/news-source/washington-update)
 
 

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