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US Armed Forces May See Pay Raises When Trump Takes Office

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American troops and their families have reason to hope that they’ll be getting raises when President-elect Donald Trump takes office in January.

Earlier this year, Trump called for increasing spending on America's military. He proposed increasing the size of the Army to about 540,000 active-duty soldiers, the Marine Corps to 36 battalions, the Navy to 350 surface ships and submarines and the Air Force to at least 1,200 fighter aircraft, according to Military.com.

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Currently, Congress is about try to add $18 billion to the annual defense budget, an increase Obama has said he would veto. This would push forward troops' pay raises.

Military pay raises have been less than 2% since 2011. Obama's planned raise is 1.6%, which is 0.5% below that of private sector wage growth.

After the election results were announced, the nonprofit National Military Family Association wrote an open letter to the president-elect asking to make the issue a priority. The military wants the 2.1% raises guaranteed by law, according to Joyce Wessel-Raezer, executive director of the association.

"If a new administration would say, ‘We are going to find a way in our budget to give you the full increase that is in law,' that would be a huge message," she said.

However, the House Committee on Armed Services, which supports a higher pay raise, has not reached consensus with the Senate, which rejected a defense funding plan earlier this year. Democrats at the time said funds were needed more in other areas; to fight opioid addiction and the Zika virus, for example.

A final deal between the two committees is slated to be struck November 14. The result is expected to be closer to the House Committee on Armed Services' proposal.

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