A bill to make technical corrections to the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2026.
Legislative Progress
Plain English Summary
AI-generatedPlain-English Summary
This bill makes technical corrections to the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) for Fiscal Year 2026. The NDAA is the large annual law that sets the budget and policies for the U.S. military and national defense programs. Technical corrections are essentially fixes to errors, inconsistencies, or unclear language that were discovered after the original law was passed — things like typos, incorrect cross-references, or wording that didn't accurately reflect what lawmakers intended.
Because no official description was provided and the bill's details are limited, the specific nature of the corrections is not publicly detailed here. However, bills like this typically do not change the overall intent or major policies of the original law — they simply clean up the text to make sure it works as intended. Think of it like correcting a contract after both parties have already signed it, just to fix minor mistakes before anything is carried out.
This type of legislation generally affects the Department of Defense, military service members, defense contractors, and federal agencies involved in national security, since they are the ones who must follow and implement the rules laid out in the NDAA. The bill passed the Senate unanimously and without changes, which is common for technical correction bills since they are not typically controversial. It has been received in the House, where it is awaiting further action.
This summary is AI-generated for informational purposes. Always refer to the official bill text for legal accuracy.
Latest Action
Held at the desk.
March 24, 2026
Sponsor
Legislative History
Held at the desk.
Mar 24, 2026Received in the House.
Mar 24, 2026Message on Senate action sent to the House.
Mar 24, 2026Introduced in the Senate, read twice, considered, read the third time, and passed without amendment by Unanimous Consent. (consideration: CR S1560; text: CR S1560)
Mar 23, 2026Passed/agreed to in Senate: Introduced in the Senate, read twice, considered, read the third time, and passed without amendment by Unanimous Consent.
Mar 23, 2026Introduced in Senate
Mar 23, 2026