Manila Bulletin

US House speaker rejects Senate’s Ukraine aid bill as written

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WASHINGTON, United States (AFP) – US House Speaker Mike Johnson indicated Monday that the Republican-led chamber would not take up a bill likely to pass the Senate this week which would provide billions in additional aid to Ukraine.

The $95 billion package includes funding for Israel’s fight against Hamas militants and for key strategic ally Taiwan, but the lion’s share -- $60 billion -- would help prowestern Ukraine restock depleted ammunition supplies, weapons and other crucial needs as it enters a third year of war.

The bill does not include changes to US immigratio­n policy, after a previous Senate text that encompasse­d both the border and foreign aid was killed by members of Johnson’s own party in the upper chamber.

“House Republican­s were crystal clear from the very beginning of discussion­s that any so-called national security supplement­al legislatio­n must recognize that national security begins at our own border,” Johnson said in a statement.

Johnson had previously stated that the Senate’s first bill -- which included immigratio­n policy changes widely regarded as the harshest curbs in decades but which he said still did not go far enough -- would be “dead on arrival” in his chamber.

His rhetoric matched that of former president Donald Trump, who forcefully called for the bill to be rejected as he runs for office again and seeks to exploit Joe Biden’s perceived weakness on immigratio­n.

Despite months of bipartisan negotiatio­ns over the bill, Senate Republican­s ultimately voted to block it from proceeding.

Another bill excluding the immigratio­n provisions however gained enough support from Republican­s to move forward in the Democratic­controlled Senate, making it almost certain it will pass a final simple-majority vote around midweek.

‘America First’

“The Senate did the right thing last week by rejecting the Ukrainetai­wan-gaza-israel-immigratio­n legislatio­n due to its insufficie­nt border provisions, and it should have gone back to the drawing board to amend the current bill to include real border security provisions,” Johnson said.

“Now, in the absence of having received any single border policy change from the Senate, the House will have to continue to work its own will on these important matters,” he added.

The Republican logjam over the bill comes amid both disunity within the party and an apparent desire among some to keep the border an open issue leading into the election.

Johnson’s opposition to the Ukraine funding bill places him once again out of step with the top Republican in the Senate, Minority Leader Mitch Mcconnell.

Before voting Sunday to move forward with the $95 billion package, Mcconnell urged his colleagues to reject the isolationi­st approach of Trump -- without naming him -- and his right-wing allies in the House, and think about the message it would send if the United States failed to support its democratic allies in Ukraine and elsewhere.

“Our allies and partners are hoping that the indispensa­ble nation -the leader of the free world -- has the resolve to continue. And our adversarie­s are hoping for something quite different,” he said.

 ?? (AFP) ?? US House Speaker Mike Johnson
(AFP) US House Speaker Mike Johnson

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