The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

GOP Sen. Johnson says Trump blocked Ukraine aid

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WASHINGTON — A Republican senator said Friday he learned from a U.S. ambassador that President Donald Trump was tying military aid for Ukraine to an investigat­ion of the 2016 election. But when the senator asked Trump if he could assure the Ukraine leadership the money would be coming, the president blocked him from carrying that message.

Sen. Ron Johnson, of Wisconsin, a leader of the Senate’s Ukraine caucus, made several trips to the Eastern European ally this year after the election of President Volodymyr Zelenskiy. He told the Wall Street Journal that Gordon Sondland, the U.S. ambassador to the European Union, told him the Ukraine aid, which is part of the country’s defenses against Russia, was being linked to Trump’s desire to have Zelenskiy’s team investigat­e the 2016 U.S. elections.

Separately, Johnson told reporters in Sheboygan, Wis., that Trump had blocked his suggestion that he carry a message to Ukraine’s president assuring him that U.S. military aid was on the way.

“I was surprised by the president’s reaction and realized we had a sales job to do,” Johnson told reporters.

The senator’s remarks fill in more details about events at the heart of the Democrats’ impeachmen­t inquiry. The probe deepened this week with the release of text messages in which Sondland and other diplomats tried to broker a meeting between Trump and Zelenskiy, on the condition that Ukraine open an investigat­ion into a gas company where Joe Biden’s son had served on the board.

Johnson has largely stood by Trump and told reporters in Washington last week that he thinks the whole complaint against the president, sparked by a government whistleblo­wer’s allegation­s, has been “blown way out of proportion.”

The senator told Washington reporters last week that he briefed Trump before and after the Ukraine visits and understood the president’s desire to root out corruption that has long plagued the Eastern European ally. He also agrees with Trump’s desire to have NATO allies contribute more money toward their security.

“I’m completely sympatheti­c with President Trump wanting to get the truth, where did this Russia narrative begin?” Johnson said about the 2016 election.

“I take what President Trump is saying at face value,” said Johnson, who’s leading some of those investigat­ions, including calling on the Justice Department to probe a Ukrainian company affiliated with Biden’s son. He said Trump is “concerned about corruption and continues to say European allies need to step up.”

Johnson said that in a call with Trump the next day he tried to convince the president to let him tell Zelinskiy the military aid would be coming but was rebuffed.

Republican­s has been reluctant to break with Trump, and Johnson also suggested he was standing by the president.

“I certainly understood President Trump had real concern about corruption in general,” Johnson said Friday.

“I’m very sympatheti­c to the fact what he’s been dragged through,” he said about the 2016 election investigat­ions. “He’d like to understand what happened.”

 ?? Associated Press file photo ?? Sen. Ron Johnson, RWis., chairman of the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Government­al Affairs, said Friday he learned from a U.S. ambassador that President Donald Trump was tying military aid for Ukraine to an investigat­ion of the 2016 election. But when asked if he could assure the Ukraine leadership the money would be coming, Trump blocked him from carrying that message.
Associated Press file photo Sen. Ron Johnson, RWis., chairman of the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Government­al Affairs, said Friday he learned from a U.S. ambassador that President Donald Trump was tying military aid for Ukraine to an investigat­ion of the 2016 election. But when asked if he could assure the Ukraine leadership the money would be coming, Trump blocked him from carrying that message.

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