House delays veterans bill amid dispute over SAVE Act

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1–2 minutes

Summary

A House vote on a veterans benefits package was delayed during a broader standoff over the SAVE Act.

Why this matters

The delay slowed action on bipartisan-backed veterans benefits changes affecting medically retired service members, survivors, and future disability payments. It also showed how disputes over unrelated legislation can stall veterans policy in Congress.

House action on a veterans benefits package was delayed as lawmakers remained at an impasse over the Safeguard American Voter Eligibility (SAVE) Act, an elections bill backed by President Donald Trump.

The House had been expected to take up the Take Care of America’s Veterans Act, H.R. 9267, this week. The Republican-backed bill includes 62 provisions to expand benefits for veterans and survivors.

Its largest provisions include the Major Richard Star Act, which would allow combat veterans who medically retired to receive both full retirement pay and Veterans Affairs disability compensation, and the Love Lives On Act, which would let military widows and widowers keep benefits if they remarry before age 55.

The bill also includes the Sharri Briley and Eric Edmundson Veterans Benefits Expansion Act, which would raise disability compensation for families of veterans with catastrophic injuries, increase payments to survivors, raise Veterans Affairs Dependency and Indemnity Compensation for survivors of veterans with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, and allow the Department of Veterans Affairs to send traveling physicians to U.S. territories and Pacific Island nations.

To pay for the package, the bill would reduce future disability compensation for tinnitus and sleep apnea. The changes would not affect current recipients, but could produce $57 billion in savings, according to supporters of the bill.

According to veterans advocacy groups, 1.5 million veterans receive disability compensation for tinnitus, and more than 1.3 million receive it for sleep apnea.

Democrats objected to using veterans benefits cuts to offset the bill’s cost and said Thursday they welcomed the delay. “Veterans benefits should not be looked at as offsets,” said Rep. Mark Takano of California, the top Democrat on the House Veterans Affairs Committee, at a press conference.

Democrats instead want Congress to pass the Major Richard Star Act by unanimous consent. That measure does not include a provision to cover its cost.

On Tuesday, House Veterans Affairs Committee Chair Mike Bost, R-Ill., said the broader bill would “give the House a serious responsible path to promoting real change for veterans.”

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