Skip navigation

Murtha wants full speed ahead on submarines

On tour of sub plant, hawkish Democrat sees potential China threat

Rep. John Murtha (D-PA)
Jonathan Ernst / Getty Images file
Rep. John Murtha (D-PA), Chairman of the House Defense Appropriations subcommittee, is on a tour of defense plants and military bases.
FREE VIDEO
‘This is not working’
March 4: Rep. John Murtha, D-Pa., on why he and fellow war critics believe Bush’s plan for a troop buildup is too optimistic.

Meet the Press

By Tom Curry
National affairs writer
msnbc.com
updated 8:42 a.m. ET April 10, 2007

GROTON, Conn. - Rep. John Murtha, D-Pa., wants more submarines built more quickly. And that will mean adding more money to the $530 billion defense budget.

On Monday, Murtha, the chairman of the House Defense Appropriations subcommittee, got that message across here in Groton, Conn., after touring the Electric Boat facility. This is where Virginia-class attack submarines are built. It is also the district of freshman Democrat Rep. Joe Courtney.

Murtha and Courtney are calling for building two submarines a year, rather than the Navy’s current one-a-year pace.

Story continues below ↓
advertisement | your ad here

Each Virginia-class sub is about the length of a football field and costs nearly $3 billion to build.

They are able to fire cruise missiles at land targets, conduct surveillance off foreign shores, and drop off commando teams to do stealth jobs behind enemy lines.

Half the work on the subs is done in Groton at the Electric Boat plant; the other half at Northrop Grumman in Newport News.

Electric Boat now has about 10,000 workers on its payroll, most of them in Groton, some at its facility at Quonset Point, R.I.

‘Wonderful news’ for Groton workers
For these workers, Murtha’s support for accelerated sub-building means job security.

“These are relatively good-paying jobs – on average about $21 an hour,” said Ken DelaCruz, president of the Metal Trades Council, the umbrella group for nine unions including the electricians, machinists, and others who work at Electric Boat. “I am just excited that he is talking about two submarines a year; it’s wonderful news for us,” DelaCruz said after conferring with Murtha on Monday.

Last year 600 workers were laid off at the plant; Murtha’s stepped-up pace would mean that most of those workers would probably be recalled.

In blunt Murtha style, he started his press briefing Monday with an awkward recollection: “When I came up to Electric Boat some 25 years ago, I found 5,000 bad welds in the Ohio (a ballistic missile sub).” But he said work quality has improved: “99.8 percent of the welds are good welds today.”

Murtha was on a tour of defense plants and military bases from Bath Iron Works in Maine (where destroyers are built), and Quonset Point and Groton on Monday to Fort Hood, Texas on Tuesday.

Powerbroker on military spending
Americans know Murtha as the man who has been calling loudly for U.S. forces’ exit from Iraq. But long before any U.S. soldier set foot in Iraq, Murtha wielded power as the Democrats’ premier military appropriator – the man who decides how many billions of dollars should be spent on destroyers, cruisers, subs and bombers.

Murtha, who holds a safe seat, has garnered campaign contributions from defense contractors, including $10,000 in the 2006 campaign from General Dynamics, the parent company of Electric Boat. Murtha shared his largesse with Democratic House candidates including Courtney to whose campaign he donated $4,000.

To keep their House majority, Democrats need to defend freshmen such as Courtney who won last November by only 91 votes out of 250,000, ousting Republican incumbent Rob Simmons.

One reason Courtney and not Simmons is now representing Connecticut’s 2nd congressional district is that voters here had given up on a Republican national security strategy that required a prolonged stay in a hostile Arab country.

Courtney said of Simmons, “I don’t think anyone questioned the sincerity of his support for increased sub building, but they saw him wedded to priorities that were undermining” the non-Iraq parts of the Pentagon budget. Last year, Simmons called for building two subs a year.

But did giving up on Iraq mean that voters wanted Congress to pare down the Pentagon budget and shift money from military hardware to the poor, the sick, and the uneducated? Not necessarily, especially not here in Groton, where subs mean jobs.


Sponsored links

Resource guide