The Hindu (Mumbai)

Aid for war

Ukraine, Israel win as Biden gets bipartisan support for aid package

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After lengthy negotiatio­ns, the United States Senate has passed with bipartisan support a $95 billion programme to send aid to Ukraine, Israel, and Taiwan. The nal vote tally was 79-18, with three Democrats voting alongside 15 Republican­s against the bill. The aid package brings together four distinct bills that the House of Representa­tives passed separately last weekend, respective­ly supplying almost $61 billion in aid for Ukraine, above $26 billion for Israel, over $8 billion for the Taiwan and the IndoPacic region, and one bill relating to Tik Tok. In their current shape, the bills closely resemble an aid package that the Senate had passed earlier this year, an initiative that was ultimately shot down when House Speaker Mike Johnson refused to bring it to the žoor of his chamber. Now that it has been passed in the Senate, the legislatio­n will move forward to the desk of President Joe Biden to sign into law, as he has said he intends to do, thus opening the door to helping Ukraine to push back against Russian aggression, to providing wartime assistance to Israel and humanitari­an aid to Gaza, and to countering territoria­l threats in the Indo-Pacic that are linked to China. The fact that the omnibus aid bills package passed with such strength in the Upper Chamber of Congress constitute­s a key win for Mr. Biden, Democratic lawmakers, and Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell, who has toiled for long months to send aid to Ukraine, in the face of opposition from the far-right wing of his own party.

That opposition, which threatens to spoil the plans of the Republican Party ‘mainstream’, includes the likes of the House Freedom Caucus, comprising ultra conservati­ve members of Congress who broadly support the agenda of former President Donald Trump. They are especially opposed to aid packages, which they consider a threat to their isolationi­st vision for the U.S. — to the point where Mr. Johnson had to introduce a ‘sweetener’ into the bill to win their vote, a promise to ban Tik Tok if it did not divest itself of Chinese ownership within a year. That the far-right segment was able to exert its inžuence on the agenda of Congress to this extent is remarkable, given that it only has a slim majority in the House, and both the Senate and White House are in the hands of the Democrats. In any case, this sizeable aid package is likely to be the last one that is approved for Ukraine and other U.S. allies until after November, which will see the White House, the House of Representa­tives and one-third of the Senate head to the polls. If Mr. Trump emerges victorious, the rightward slide of the Congress might gather considerab­le momentum, giving the MAGA movement the teeth that it needs to carry forward its agenda of institutio­nal nihilism.

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