Orlando Sentinel

Of course Rubio, Scott opposed Ukraine aid

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After a contentiou­s debate in Congress, President Biden signed the Ukraine Security Supplement­al Appropriat­ions Act into law (“Biden says US is rushing weaponry to Ukraine,” April 24). The aid package, designed to help the beleaguere­d U.S. ally continue its effort to survive the murderous Russian military incursion, was overwhelmi­ngly approved by the Senate. Among those who voted against the bill were Florida’s senators, Marco Rubio and Rick Scott.

No strangers to sacrificin­g principle for political expediency, Rubio and Scott are once again attempting to curry favor with Donald Trump, a Ukraine aid skeptic. Their history of pandering to Trump is well-documented. Scott, we may remember, breached his oath of office during Trump’s first impeachmen­t proceeding, when in contravent­ion to the neutrality condition in Article I of the Constituti­on, he expressed his intention to vote for acquittal before trial in the Senate even began. Rubio, once a harsh Trump critic, refused to say that Trump was wrong when he attempted to stop Congress from fulfilling its constituti­onal duty of confirming then President-elect Joe Biden’s victory.

Rubio and Scott’s votes against aid were shortsight­ed. There is much more at stake than the survival of a sovereign democratic ally. America’s reputation, alliances and national security interests are all on the line.

Jim Paladino, Tampa

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