Key Highlights
- Pete Hegseth has ordered a department-wide review of the U.S. military legal system aimed at reducing bureaucracy and improving operational effectiveness.
- Lawmakers are advancing reforms covering federal pensions, FEMA transparency, USPS hazardous material fees, and oversight of federal employee dispute settlements.
- The Senate confirmed Arvind Raman to lead the National Institute of Standards and Technology as debates continue over AI standards, federal spending, and emerging technology policy.
The U.S. federal government is advancing a wide-ranging series of policy reviews, oversight initiatives, and administrative reforms spanning defense, technology, emergency management, and workforce operations.
At the center of the latest developments, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has directed a departmentwide review of “all aspects of the military legal system.”
The Pentagon’s general counsel has been tasked with evaluating legal programs across military branches, benchmarking them against the Department of Justice and broader criminal justice systems, and recommending ways to streamline operations and reduce bureaucracy.
The review aligns with Hegseth’s broader effort to reorganize military legal offices under what he has described as a push from “tepid legality” toward “maximum lethality,” signaling a more operationally focused defense structure.
Congress Targets Pension Errors and Workplace Disputes
Bipartisan lawmakers in the House are attempting to correct pension payment errors affecting nearly 8,000 retired uniformed service members during last year’s government shutdown.
The proposed legislation would address missed pension payments impacting retirees from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and the Public Health Service Commissioned Corps.
Federal employee workplace disputes are also drawing attention from Republicans on the House Oversight Committee.
Chairman James Comer has raised concerns over the number of settlements involving federal employees, arguing that agencies may rely too heavily on settlements instead of litigation. Employment attorneys, however, contend the criticism oversimplifies agencies’ legal and financial decision-making processes.
USPS, FEMA, and Federal Data Oversight Expand
The United States Postal Service is also moving toward tighter shipping regulations by proposing new fees for hazardous materials shipped through Priority Mail services. The plan includes additional penalties for improperly prepared hazardous shipments, with implementation targeted for July 2026 pending regulatory approval.
Separately, the Federal Emergency Management Agency will soon be required to provide real-time transparency into disaster assistance reimbursement requests through a new online dashboard mandated under homeland security appropriations legislation.
The measure responds to longstanding complaints from local governments over delays and a lack of visibility into reimbursement processing.
Data governance has emerged as another growing policy focus. Researchers from the University of California, Berkeley School of Information recently launched a Federal Data Field Guide aimed at explaining how government data is collected, shared, and regulated amid increasing concerns surrounding access to sensitive federal datasets.
NIST Leadership and Golden Dome Cost Debate Intensifies
The Senate has also confirmed Arvind Raman as the next director of the National Institute of Standards and Technology. Raman will oversee the agency during a critical period for AI, quantum computing, and advanced technology standardization efforts.

