Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Johnson lays out potential map to Ukraine vote

- CATIE EDMONDSON

WASHINGTON — House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., has begun publicly laying out potential conditions for extending a fresh round of U.S. military assistance to Ukraine, the strongest indication yet that he plans to push through the chamber a package that many Republican­s view as toxic and have tried to block.

His terms may include tying the aid for Ukraine to a measure that would force President Joe Biden to reverse a moratorium on new permits for liquefied natural gas export facilities, something that Republican­s would see as a political victory against the Democratic president’s climate agenda. The move would also hand Johnson a powerful parochial win, unblocking a proposed export terminal in his home state of Louisiana that would be situated along a shipping channel that connects the Gulf of Mexico to Lake Charles.

“When we return after this work period, we’ll be moving a product, but it’s going to have some important innovation­s,” Johnson said Sunday in an interview on Fox News.

That strongly suggests that the aid package for Ukraine, which has been stalled on Capitol Hill for months amid Republican resistance, could clear Congress within weeks. It enjoys strong support among Democrats and a large coalition of mainstream Republican­s, and the main obstacle standing in its way in the House has been Johnson’s refusal to bring it up in the face of vehement hardright opposition in the GOP to sending more aid to Ukraine.

In the interview, he openly discussed how to structure the aid, saying he had not come to any final decisions on what he would ultimately put to a vote but that he had been “working to build that consensus” among House Republican­s.

Johnson cited the REPO Act, which would pay for some of the aid by selling off Russian sovereign assets that have been frozen, as one idea under considerat­ion.

“If we can use the seized assets of Russian oligarchs to allow the Ukrainians to fight them, that’s just pure poetry,” he said.

U.S. officials had previously been skeptical of the idea, warning that there was no precedent for seizing large sums of money from another sovereign nation and that the move could set off unpredicta­ble legal ramificati­ons and economic consequenc­es. Only about $5 billion or so of Russian assets are in the hands of U.S. institutio­ns; more than $300 billion in Russian central bank assets are stashed in Western nations.

But the Biden administra­tion has quietly come around on the idea amid waning financial support for Ukraine.

Johnson also floated the idea of sending some of the aid as a loan, noting that “even President Trump has talked about” the concept.

And he mentioned an idea he first privately raised in February, at a White House meeting with Biden and other congressio­nal leaders, of tying the aid to lifting the Biden administra­tion’s pause on liquefied natural gas exports. He and other Republican­s have argued that by prohibitin­g U.S. exports of domestic energy, the administra­tion has in effect increased reliance on Russian gas and indirectly funded President Vladimir Putin’s offensive against Ukraine. He cited the case of Calcasieu Pass 2, the proposed export terminal in Louisiana.

“We want to unleash American energy,” Johnson said.

The reversal of the liquefied natural gas moratorium in particular could be a powerful political incentive for Republican­s, ratcheting up pressure on the White House to abandon a policy they have long denounced.

The administra­tion paused new export permits after months of protests by environmen­tal activists, who argued that adding new gas export facilities would lock in decades of additional greenhouse gas emissions, the main driver of climate change. The administra­tion said it would take time to analyze the effect of new permits on the climate, national security and the economy.

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