Hawaii News

Schatz Highlights Global Health, Indo-Pacific Funding in FY 2026 Aid Bill

Play
Listen to this Article
5 minutes
Loading Audio... Article will play after ad...
Playing in :00
A
A
A

U.S. Sen. Brian Schatz of Hawai‘i, the ranking member of the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on State, Foreign Operations, and Related Programs, led bipartisan negotiations for the fiscal year 2026 State and Foreign Operations appropriations bill.

“A year after President Trump began illegally and recklessly gutting American foreign assistance, this bill is proof that there remains broad, bipartisan support for critical investments that advance our national interests and promote our values,” Schatz said in a press release.

Schatz said the compromise bill reflects bipartisan negotiations over U.S. diplomatic, development and international security priorities. The bill now moves forward in the appropriations process as lawmakers work to finalize federal spending ahead of the new fiscal year.

“This bill preserves what’s working and restores funding for a range of priorities, including U.S. engagement in the Indo-Pacific, global food security in partnership with American universities, economic growth and development, and global health,” Schatz said. “The bill also sustains our investments in our diplomatic workforce and rejects the President’s efforts to retreat from multilateral institutions. Together, these investments will save lives, strengthen our alliances and partnerships around the world, rebuild American competitiveness, and make Americans safer at home.”

Schatz conceded that the is disappointed there will remain some steep cuts to important programs.

ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW AD
ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW AD

“We can’t do more with less when global instability is at an all-time high,” he said. “And though we’ve enhanced transparency and oversight mechanisms and closed loopholes the administration used over the last year to abuse foreign assistance, we should have gone further to constrain the administration from arbitrarily cutting off effective, longstanding partnerships.

“For example, while the bill ensures continued funding for our international broadcasting grantees, it forces cuts at a time when they are trying to provide critical services in Ukraine, the Middle East and across the Indo-Pacific.”

Key Points & Highlights:

Global Health: The bill includes $9.4 billion for global health programs, which is $5.6 billion higher than the level requested by President Trump. The bill supports critical health initiatives, including to: combat HIV/AIDS, malaria, tuberculosis and polio; advance global health security; and strengthen programs to support maternal and child health, vulnerable children and more.

The bill protects longstanding funding for family planning and reproductive health services, includes funding for nutrition programs and efforts to combat neglected tropical diseases, and includes funding for a U.S. contribution to Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance.

ADVERTISEMENT

The bill also includes $3 billion above President Trump’s request for programs to combat HIV/AIDS, including funding for a U.S. contribution to the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria, and it requires additional reporting on the administration’s America First Global Health Strategy.

The bill also includes a new directive to support the research, development and delivery of vaccines and other innovative technologies for the prevention and treatment of HIV/AIDS, malaria and other infectious diseases.

Economic and Development Assistance: The bill includes $6.8 billion for a new, consolidated National Security Investment Programs account to support bilateral economic and development assistance, including: economic resilience, food security and agricultural development; counter trafficking in persons; education, conservation and energy; water and sanitation; women’s empowerment; and other programs to advance prosperity and development globally.

This is $3.9 billion above the level requested by President Trump and will restore activities canceled in 2025 through partisan rescission and illegal impoundment.

Humanitarian Assistance: The bill provides $5.5 billion for humanitarian assistance programs, with new oversight requirements to ensure funds are prioritized to meet the most urgent humanitarian needs worldwide.

ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW AD

Democracy Programs: The bill rejects President Trump’s request to eliminate a Department of State account for democracy programming and fully funds the National Endowment for Democracy at $315 million.

International Organizations: The bill rejects President Trump’s request to eliminate support for the United Nations and other international organizations, allocating $3.3 billion to pay dues and ensure the United States preserves its global leadership role.

Department of State Operations: The bill maintains full funding at $9.7 billion for the Department of State to carry out its diplomatic and foreign assistance activities across the globe, and it supports investments in the State Department’s workforce, with increased funding for diplomatic security, information technology and cybersecurity.

Food Security: The bill includes $720 million for food security and agricultural development programs, including at least $72 million to restore funding for Feed the Future Innovation Labs, which support partnerships between U.S. universities and developing-country research institutions to advance novel solutions to pressing food-security challenges.

The bill also includes $54 million for a U.S. contribution to the International Fund for Agricultural Development and funding to increase the procurement and delivery of Ready-to-Use Therapeutic Foods.

Supporting Allies and Partners: The bill includes critical funding to strengthen cooperation with allies and partners across the globe, by providing more than $1.8 billion for implementation of the Indo-Pacific Strategy and fully funding the Countering PRC Influence Fund ; protecting funding for partners in Europe and Eurasia to counter threats from the Russian Federation; ensuring restoration of U.S. engagement in sub-Saharan Africa; and sustaining international security assistance and training programs across the globe.

Development Finance, Export, and Trade: The bill maintains full funding for the U.S. International Development Finance Corporation to operationalize its recent reauthorization; for the Export-Import Bank and its supply chain resilience and related activities; and for the U.S. Trade and Development Agency.

Independent Agencies: The bill includes $830 million for the Millennium Challenge Corporation — $606 million above President Trump’s request — and provides flexibility to address programmatic issues stemming from the 2025 foreign aid reviews and stop-work orders.

The bill also includes $410.5 million for the Peace Corps and $157.8 million for the International Boundary and Water Commission. The bill completely rejects the Trump administration’s plans to eliminate independent entities.

Assistance Effectiveness, Transparency, and Oversight: The bill includes new provisions requiring enhanced transparency and oversight to reassert the role of Congress and help ensure congressional directives and other requirements cannot be circumvented.

Defeating Republican Riders: The bill rejects more than 15 extreme riders included in House Republicans’ bill — from attacks on reproductive health to prohibitions on U.S. engagement in international environmental initiatives.

Sponsored Content

Subscribe to our Newsletter

Stay in-the-know with daily
headlines delivered straight to your inbox.
Cancel
×

Comments

This comments section is a public community forum for the purpose of free expression. Although Kauai Now encourages respectful communication only, some content may be considered offensive. Please view at your own discretion. View Comments