New Haven Register (New Haven, CT)

House Democrats launch an effort to force a vote on Ukraine aid, but face long odds

- By Stephen Groves

WASHINGTON — House Democrats on Tuesday launched a long-shot effort to force a vote on $95 billion in aid for Ukraine, Israel and Taiwan, intensifyi­ng pressure on Speaker Mike Johnson to take up the foreign funding package.

Democrats, as the minority in the House, began gathering signatures for a “discharge petition” — a seldom-successful procedural tool that can circumvent the speaker’s control over which bills come up for a vote.

For the petition to trigger action in the House, it must be signed by a majority of lawmakers, or 218 members. With Republican­s controllin­g the House 219-213, at least some Republican­s would have to buck their leadership and sign for the petition to reach a majority. Plus, some progressiv­e Democrats are unlikely to sign on because the legislatio­n includes military aid for Israel.

The move underscore­d the stubborn impasse in Congress over the roughly $60 billion in military aid for Ukraine, with conservati­ves balking at providing more ammunition and weaponry for Kyiv. Johnson, a Louisiana Republican, has resisted taking up the package passed by the Senate last month and insisted that the House work its own will on the matter. He has suggested the House will turn to the package only after government funding is settled — and he still insists the money must be paired with policy changes at the U.S. border with Mexico.

At the same time, Ukrainian soldiers have suffered from shortages of ammunition as U.S. supplies have been shut off in recent months.

“We have made every single opportunit­y to engage with the speaker on bringing the bill to the floor as a bipartisan piece of legislatio­n,” said Rep. Rosa DeLauro, the top Democrat on the House Appropriat­ions Committee.

“Why not just bring it to the floor? You know, it would win overwhelmi­ngly.”

Johnson has faced bipartisan calls to advance the foreign aid package. Some House Republican­s are now trying to draft their own version of the bill in hopes of breaking the stalemate. Their version trims back the foreign aid to Ukraine so that it is only for the country’s military, not for the functionin­g of its government.

Johnson has encouraged Republican­s to resist signing on to any discharge petitions and said he would eventually address Ukraine aid, but he has not come out with any clear plan.

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