Top House Democrat grills Hegseth on submarine spending plans: 'Give us the details'

Rep. Rosa DeLauro confronted Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth over the nation's shipbuilding capacity, claiming the Pentagon had long failed to inform Congress of its plan to address shortfalls.

Rep. Rosa DeLauro confronted Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth during a heated House Appropriations Committee hearing Tuesday over years-long lags in the nation’s shipbuilding capacity.  (Al Drago/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

"There is a gap," Hegseth admitted, "but we believe we are closing it."

But DeLauro wasn’t satisfied, demanding detailed data to back up that claim.

"We do not have any information or data that can substantiate what you’re saying," she shot back. "Give us the details."

"We've had difficulty with the prior administration, and I don't mind calling them out. What is your plan for the future?"

Asked what the status is of the department’s investment in submarine programs, Hegseth boasted of a 14% increase in funding in the fiscal year 2026 budget request for the Columbia-class nuclear-powered ballistic missile submarines and a "substantial increase" in the Virginia-class fast-attack submarines as well. 

But the congresswoman raised concerns about reports that the Pentagon plans to shift $3.1 billion in funding for the Columbia-class submarine program from FY2026 to FY2027 and FY2028.

"There is a gap," Defense Sec. Pete Hegseth admitted of the nation's shipbuilding capacity and its needs  (REUTERS/Annabelle Gordon)

When pressed for specifics, Hegseth thanked the committee for its flexibility and acknowledged prior mismanagement under previous administrations. But DeLauro cut him off.

"I want your plan," she said. "Can we get that in writing and on paper? Because we don’t have anything today. We have zip, nada."

Hegseth promised to provide the committee with written details of the department’s submarine production plan.

"We have the details, and we will provide them," he said.

DeLauro insisted she wanted the information before the committee's markup later the same day.

The U.S. Navy’s shipbuilding capacity has been on the decline since the Cold War. In the 1980s, the U.S. aimed for a 600-ship fleet; today, it struggles to maintain 300 operational vessels. 

The Navy currently operates under 50 attack submarines, well below the long-term requirement of 66 boats, as outlined by recent Navy force structure assessments.

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Shipyards like Electric Boat (General Dynamics) in Connecticut and Huntington Ingalls Industries in Virginia and Mississippi are the primary builders of nuclear submarines—but both are operating near maximum capacity and face major workforce and supply chain challenges.

Shipbuilders report significant difficulties in hiring, training and retaining welders, pipefitters, engineers and designers. Shipbuilding’s highly specialized supply chain was hit especially hard by the Covid-19 pandemic and has been slow to recover. 

https://www.foxnews.com/politics/top-house-democrat-grills-hegseth-submarine-spending-plans-give-us-details