Sunday, December 28, 2025

House speaker defends administration’s move to keep military paid during government shutdown – US politics live

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Johnson defends administration’s move to keep military paid during shutdown

The House speaker has said that the Trump administration has “every right” to move around the “duly appropriated dollars from Congress to the Department of Defense”.

The Pentagon and the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) has said that unspent funds from research and development accounts will be used to pay members of the military while the government is shutdown. That means that troops will still receive a paycheck on 15 October, and a separate funding bill to keep them paid won’t be needed for the time being. Democratic lawmakers, however, have questioned the legality of this move.

“If the Democrats want to go to court and challenge troops being paid, bring it,” Johnson snapped back today. “I’m grateful for a commander in chief who understands the priorities of the country.”

Over the weekend, Trump said that he would “not allow the Democrats to hold our military, and the entire security of our nation, HOSTAGE, with their dangerous government shutdown,” when he ordered defense secretary Pete Hegseth to release funds to ensure that service members still receive a salary.

Key events

Supreme court rejects Alex Jones appeal to order requiring him to pay $1.4bn to Sandy Hook families

The supreme court has declined to hear Alex Jones’s challenge to a $1.4bn judgment awarded to families of the victims of the Sandy Hook Elementary School mass shooting in 2012.

Jones, a noted conspiracy theorist and founder of Infowars, made several false statements that the shooting – which killed 20 children – was a hoax.

Justices today rejected Jones’s appeal of the Connecticut Appellate Court’s decision in a defamation lawsuit, issued in 2022. Jones argued that the judgment violated his rights under the US constitution to due process and free speech.

Infowars founder, Alex Jones, appearing at his Sandy Hook defamation trial at Connecticut Superior Court in 2022. Photograph: Mike Segar/Reuters

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