Las Vegas Review-Journal

America is stronger when we work together and support our friends

Wouldn’t it be great if this campaign season was defined by politician­s arguing over who gets more credit for good things happening, rather than pointing fingers about who gets more blame for inaction?

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Congress has finally delivered much-needed aid for Ukraine and other allies. For months, it almost didn’t seem possible. Election-year politics, including cynical opposition from former President Donald Trump and the far-right flank in the U.S. House of Representa­tives, helped stall previous bipartisan efforts to advance foreign aid and strengthen U.S. border security.

Despite a lot of hard and collaborat­ive work, including the U.S. Senate passing its own $95 billion aid package in February, it looked as if gridlock in the House would derail action and abandon our Ukrainian allies at a disastrous point in their fight against Russian aggression.

Thankfully, if belatedly, lawmakers and the Biden administra­tion have stepped up to prevent that from happening. House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-LA., deserves credit, and support from Democrats in the looming challenge to his speakershi­p, for listening to alarming intelligen­ce reports out of Ukraine and standing up to the hardliners in his caucus.

Those hardliners have framed his move to help secure roughly $95 billion in assistance for Ukraine, Israel, Taiwan and humanitari­an efforts as a “surrender.” If anything, Johnson and the solid majority of Congress who supported this aid surrendere­d to the reality that a strong America requires maintainin­g strong alliances.

Compromise is not capitulati­on. Congressio­nal leaders did the right thing by working through their difference­s to secure this military and humanitari­an support. Failure to do so would have been its own form of surrender to Vladimir Putin and the creeping authoritar­ianism seen around the globe.

Despite the drama surroundin­g Johnson’s breakthrou­gh in the House, this progress didn’t happen overnight. President Joe Biden was consistent in his call for more aid. Unified efforts in the Senate from Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and Republican leader Mitch Mcconnell of Kentucky, and ongoing collaborat­ion between top appropriat­ors Patty Murray of Washington and Susan Collins of Maine, surely helped set the stage for this eventual success.

Hopefully lawmakers in both houses and parties now recognize that working together toward imperfect solutions is better than total inaction. And hopefully they realize that the U.S. cannot retreat from a complicate­d and dangerous world. Failing to support our friends would not only weaken our global standing morally, but strategica­lly.

Collins, who helped shepherd the aid package through the Senate, outlined the need for a strong response to global threats in a speech on the Senate floor ahead of Tuesday’s vote.

“In the past few months, I have received briefings from two combatant commanders — Gen. (Michael) Kurilla of the U.S. Central Command and Adm. (John) Aquilino of U.S. Indo-pacific Command. Each of them has told me that this is the most dangerous global environmen­t that they have seen. One said in 40 years, the other said in 50 years,” the Republican said in her speech.

The point, Collins stressed, “is that the threats that the United States faces from an aggressive Iran and its proxies, an imperialis­tic Russia, and a hegemonic China are interconne­cted. How we respond to one affects how the other will operate. They require a strong response.”

Congress has now followed through with that strong response, and Biden has signed the aid package into law. The Senate’s 79-18 vote in favor was particular­ly overwhelmi­ng. Sen. Angus King, I-maine, supported the aid package and had long called for additional support to Ukraine.

“Murderous dictators and terrorist groups around the world have been betting on the dysfunctio­n of the American Congress — that we couldn’t come together to pass a bipartisan agreement,” King said in a statement after the vote. “They’ve been betting that democracy can’t work, that we can’t make tough decisions and tough commitment­s and live up to them. I want to stand on the right side of history in fighting authoritar­ianism. I want to stand on the side of democracy. So I believe aiding our allies and partners is critical to securing American interests and stability around the world.”

Johnson has said that “history is going to judge this well” and that “it was the right thing to do.” We agree, and we expect that politician­s will find that doing the right thing historical­ly can also turn out to be the right thing politicall­y. It already looks like Johnson could find bipartisan support to fend off a potential motion to vacate his speakershi­p, for example.

The pragmatism on display in passing the foreign aid package should now carry over to other issues, like immigratio­n and border security. Wouldn’t it be great if this campaign season was defined by politician­s arguing over who gets more credit for good things happening, rather than pointing fingers about who gets more blame for inaction?

Just as America is stronger when we support our friends, we are also stronger when we work through our difference­s and find solutions — even imperfect ones.

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