House Appropriators Add Amost $3 Billion to President’s Request for Space Force

House Appropriators Add Amost $3 Billion to President’s Request for Space Force

The House Appropriations committee took the first step in crafting a FY2026 bill to fund the Department of Defense today, albeit reluctantly. Appropriators from both parties lamented the paucity of data they have about what the money will be used for, but decided to move ahead and mark up their bill at subcommittee level this afternoon. Full committee markup is scheduled for Thursday. President Trump’s request would cut about $2.5 billion from the U.S. Space Force’s budget, but the committee would restore it and add a little more. [Update: the full committee approved the bill on June 12.]

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What’s Happening in Space Policy June 8-14, 2025

What’s Happening in Space Policy June 8-14, 2025

Here is SpacePolicyOnline.com’s list of space policy events for the week of June 8-14, 2025 and any insight we can offer about them. The House and Senate are in session this week.

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A Second Lunar Landing Failure for ispace

A Second Lunar Landing Failure for ispace

A second attempt by a Japanese company to land on the Moon failed today, two years after the first try.  In a post-landing press conference, the company, ispace, said they have just begun analyzing the data to figure out what happened. Whether there are any similarities to the first failure is yet to be determined.

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Senate Committee Wants to Keep Gateway, SLS and Orion

Senate Committee Wants to Keep Gateway, SLS and Orion

The Senate committee that oversees NASA released its proposal for the reconciliation bill today signaling support for NASA’s current Moon to Mars plan, not the Trump Administration’s version. The $10 billion designated for NASA includes full funding for the Gateway lunar space station, two more SLS rockets and a fourth Orion spacecraft. None of that is in the Trump plan.

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Musk Threatens to Decommission Dragon Amid Feud with Trump

Musk Threatens to Decommission Dragon Amid Feud with Trump

Less than one week after Elon Musk and President Trump shared a warm Oval Office send-off as Musk ended his Special Government Employee status, the two are in a war of words with Trump threatening to end Musk’s government subsidies and contracts. Musk responded with his own threat to immediately begin decommissioning Dragon, which would have dramatic consequences for the International Space Station. Cargo Dragon is one of two U.S. spacecraft that can deliver supplies to the ISS and Crew Dragon is the only operational U.S. vehicle capable of ferrying crews back and forth.

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What’s Happening in Space Policy June 1-8, 2025

What’s Happening in Space Policy June 1-8, 2025

Here is SpacePolicyOnline.com’s list of space policy events for the week plus a day of June 1-8, 2025 and any insight we can offer about them. The House and Senate are in session this week.

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NASA Copes with Details of $6 Billion Budget Cut, Leadership Uncertainty

NASA Copes with Details of $6 Billion Budget Cut, Leadership Uncertainty

The Trump Administration sent the full FY2026 budget request to Congress late Friday spelling out the details of the $6 billion (24.3 percent) cut to NASA revealed in the May 2 “skinny budget.”  The request drives home the point that human spaceflight now outweighs everything else at NASA, a sea-change from an era when science had an almost equal seat at the table. On top of that, yesterday’s decision by President Trump to withdraw the nomination of Jared Isaacman to be NASA Administrator adds uncertainty. The White House said a replacement will be announced soon, but whoever it is still must go through the confirmation process, keeping the agency in limbo.

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Jared Isaacman Out as NASA Administrator Nominee

Jared Isaacman Out as NASA Administrator Nominee

Today the White House announced it is withdrawing Jared Isaacman’s nomination to be NASA Administrator. The reason given is that the Administrator must be “in complete alignment with President Trump’s America First agenda” and apparently they think Isaacman is not. The White House said a replacement nominee would be announced soon. Isaacman tweeted that he is grateful to those who supported him and he has “not flown my last mission” and remains “incredibly optimistic” about the future of the space program.

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Musk Still Hoping for First Starship to Mars Next Year

Musk Still Hoping for First Starship to Mars Next Year

Undeterred by the third Starship RUD in a row two days ago, Elon Musk remains optimistic about sending an uncrewed Starship to Mars at the end of next year and a crewed flight 26-months later. In a talk to SpaceX employees today, delayed from Tuesday, Musk highlighted recent successes while avoiding the problems, and kept the focus on his vision of humanity’s future — sending millions of people to Mars to create a multiplanetary species.

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China Launches Tianwen-2 Asteroid Sample-Return Mission

China Launches Tianwen-2 Asteroid Sample-Return Mission

China launched the robotic Tianwen-2 spacecraft today to return samples from a Near Earth Asteroid that is in an orbit around the Sun similar to Earth’s. China has brought back samples from the Moon twice already, but this will be the first time from an asteroid. If successful, it will join Japan and the United States in achieving that feat and, like those spacecraft, Tianwen-2 will continue on to a secondary mission — studying a comet in the main asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter.

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