Hawley and Warren Propose Curbing Defense Contractor Payouts Tied to Performance
Sens. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., and Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., have introduced the Prioritizing the Warfighter in Defense Contracting Act of 2026, a bipartisan bill that would restrict stock buybacks, dividends and high executive pay at major defense contractors unless they meet Pentagon performance standards on their contracts. Citing a recent GAO report showing major weapons programs suffered 18‑month average delays and $49 billion in added costs in a single year, the senators argue that large contractors are funneling too much taxpayer money into shareholder returns instead of production capacity and research and development. Warren’s office says the top four contractors — Lockheed Martin, Raytheon, General Dynamics and Boeing — have spent $89 billion on buybacks and dividends since 2021, with an estimated two‑thirds of that funded by U.S. taxpayers through defense contracts. The bill would give the Defense Department broader tools to flag underperforming contractors, demand remediation plans, suspend or terminate contracts, and publicly report which companies are subject to these restrictions or granted waivers. The proposal aligns with President Trump’s stated push to boost weapons output and will intensify an already heated fight in Washington over whether the Pentagon’s industrial base is serving national security needs or shareholder interests during the Iran war buildup.
📌 Key Facts
- Hawley and Warren introduced the Prioritizing the Warfighter in Defense Contracting Act of 2026 to tie buybacks, dividends and executive pay to contract performance.
- A GAO report cited by the sponsors found that delays for major defense acquisition programs increased by 18 months and cost estimates rose by $49 billion in the last year.
- Warren’s office says Lockheed Martin, Raytheon, General Dynamics and Boeing spent $89 billion on buybacks and dividends since 2021, about two‑thirds funded by taxpayer dollars.
- The bill would empower the Pentagon to suspend payments, cut off progress payments, or terminate contracts for underperforming firms and to publicly report affected contractors and waivers.
📊 Relevant Data
Continuing resolutions and stopgap funding measures have caused program delays, increased costs due to inflation and vendor issues, and administrative burdens across the Department of Defense.
Stopgap funding measures cause delays, increased costs, administrative burden across DoD — Federal News Network
Root causes of cost growth in major defense acquisition programs include engineering changes (contributing about 30% to cost growth), schedule changes (about 20%), and quantity changes (about 15%), based on analysis of programs from 2010-2020.
Root Causes of Cost Growth in Major Defense Acquisition Programs — Institute for Defense Analyses (IDA)
In the Department of Defense civilian STEM workforce, White men have higher levels of unadjusted compensation than all other demographic groups except Asian men, with gaps ranging from 5-15% after controlling for factors like education and experience.
Demographic Diversity of the DoD STEM Workforce — RAND Corporation
Among large federal contractors, White men held 59% of executive positions in 2020, despite comprising a smaller proportion of the overall workforce, with women and minorities underrepresented at the top levels.
No diversity at the top: How federal contractors are failing America — Reveal from The Center for Investigative Reporting
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