Military: Biden administration opposes merit-based military promotions, no diversity quotas
The House defense budget seeks to prohibit affirmative action promoted by Democrats' so-called fairness policies.
The Biden administration sent its objections to the National Defense Authorization bill for Fiscal Year 2024 (NDAA FY24). The White House opposes merit-based military promotions, i.e. those that do not take into account the racial, gender or equity quotas imposed by Biden when he became president.
The House Armed Services Committee details the budgets for the Armed Forces and Defense policy. In several of its sections (364, 523, 566, 595, 596, 598, 904, and 1046), the NDAA proposes "data- and evidence-based" scales for designing the Armed Forces and choosing their members by 2024.
According to the Executive Office of the President, these sections of the NDAA come to undermine the administration's attempts to make the military a diverse organization. Diversity benchmarks in the military were stipulated in the White House's Diversity, Equity, Inclusion and Access (DEIA) policy, which Biden imposed in 2021 for all federal agencies. The Republican-controlled commission's proposal also calls for ending the position of chief diversity officer at the Department of Defense (DOD). The position was especially controversial when the DOD had to terminate its diversity officer in March after instances of anti-white racism.
Woke culture, the "cancer" of the Armed Forces
Indiana Republican Rep. Jim Banks, who sits on the Armed Services Committee, told the New York Post that "White House opposition to my amendments is a badge of honor."
"Woke-ism is a cancer that will destroy our Armed Forces from within if we don't stop it," Banks added. The representative assures however that his contributions to the NDAA are not totally incompatible with Biden's DEIA. They encourage promotions and hiring to be made "on the basis of merit, with the goal of promoting those individuals who exhibit the talent and capabilities necessary to promote the national security of the United States."
Chip Roy, another proponent of the contentious sections of the NDAA, asserts that the amendments are aimed at making the military effective and lethal. "What we're trying to do is move to a colorblind, race-neutral worldview," Roy said in a statement to the media.
The NDAA will be debated this Thursday in the House. In addition to affirmative action policies, it addresses serious issues such as recruitment problems, troop morale and the war in Ukraine.