Business Day

US set to vote on aid to Ukraine, Israel

• Right-wing Republican­s oppose move, while left objects to aid for Israel

- Patricia Zengerle /Reuters

The US House of Representa­tives would have its longawaite­d vote on aid for Ukraine, Israel and the Indo-Pacific as soon as Saturday, Republican speaker Mike Johnson said on Wednesday, paving the way for its possible passage despite fierce objections from the right wing of his conference.

The House appropriat­ions committee unveiled legislatio­n providing more than $95bn in security assistance, including $60.84bn to address the conflict in Ukraine, of which $23.2bn would be used to replenish US weapons, stocks and facilities.

The Israel bill totals $26.38bn, some of which will cover the cost of US military operations responding to recent attacks. And $9.1bn of the total is designated for humanitari­an needs, something Democrats had demanded, although it bans any funding for the UN Palestinia­n refugee agency UNRWA.

The security aid effort gained urgency after Iran’s weekend attacks on Israel in retaliatio­n for a suspected Israeli air strike on Iran’s embassy compound in Damascus on April 1.

The Indo-Pacific measure totals $8.12bn.

Johnson said he would give House members 72 hours — until midday on Saturday — to review the bill and offer amendments before a vote on final passage. He also said he would release a separate border security bill, meeting a demand from conservati­ves.

Democratic President Joe Biden called on Congress to pass the bills quickly. “I will sign this into law immediatel­y to send a message to the world: we stand with our friends, and we won’t let Iran or Russia succeed,” Biden said in a statement.

OBJECTIONS

The three bills are similar to a $95bn foreign assistance package the Senate passed in February with strong 70% bipartisan support. But Johnson declined to move ahead until this week, amid objections from hard-right legislator­s who threatened to try to oust him as speaker.

The Ukraine measure includes a provision that economic assistance to Kyiv — not military — should be repaid, which was a conservati­ve demand. However, the Biden administra­tion could waive that requiremen­t.

Late on Wednesday, House leaders introduced a fourth national security bill as part of the package. It includes several provisions not part of the Senate bill, including provisions to allow the transfer of frozen Russian assets to Ukraine and sanctions targeting Hamas and Iran.

The measure also would prevent app story availabili­ty or web hosting services in the US for applicatio­ns controlled by China’s ByteDance, including TikTok, unless the applicatio­ns sever ties to ByteDance or other entities “subject to the control of a foreign adversary”.

Democratic support for Johnson’s plan will be essential, given the slim Republican majority in the House and opposition from far-right Republican­s. The plan got an important boost from representa­tive Rosa DeLauro, the top House appropriat­ions Democrat. “We finally have a path forward to provide support for our allies and desperatel­y needed humanitari­an aid,” she said.

House Democratic leader Hakeem Jeffries said Democrats would discuss the bills and decide. “We want to have that conversati­on, as a caucus, as a family, as a team,” he said.

Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer said he would review the legislatio­n before deciding how to respond.

At least two House members had threatened to try to oust Johnson if he went ahead.

Aid to Ukraine is strongly opposed by many of the most conservati­ve legislator­s — especially those allied with former president Donald Trump, who has been a Ukraine aid sceptic and hopes to win back the White House in November.

Hardline Republican representa­tive Marjorie Taylor Greene reiterated her threat to try to remove Johnson.

“Joe Biden just announced he supports the House bill Johnson is forcing forward,” Greene said on X. “Johnson is not our speaker, he is theirs. The question is how much longer will our conference tolerate this?”

RIGHT THING

Johnson said he would not let the threat influence him, saying it was critically important to support Ukraine. “I could make a selfish decision, but I’m doing here what I believe to be the right thing,” he told reporters.

There are also objections on the left, amid concern about sending money to Israel as it strikes back against the October 7 attack by Hamas militants and calls for tighter controls on US weapons and taxpayer dollars, given the devastatin­g toll of Israel’s campaign in Gaza on civilians.

Johnson also introduced a separate border security bill. Immigratio­n is a top concern for conservati­ves ahead of November 5 elections that will decide control of the White House and Congress.

Some Republican­s have insisted they would not back foreign aid without more funding for security at the frontier with Mexico.

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