The Punxsutawney Spirit

As conflicts rage abroad, a fractured Congress tries to rally support for historic global challenges

- By Stephen Groves and Seung Min Kim

WASHINGTON (AP) — As the Senate wrapped up its work for the year, Sen. Michael Bennet took to the floor of the nearly empty chamber and made a late-night plea for Congress to redouble support for Ukraine: “Understand the stakes at this moment."

It was the third time in recent months the Colorado Democrat has kept the Senate working late by holding up unrelated legislatio­n in a bid to cajole lawmakers to approve tens of billions of dollars in weaponry and economic aid for Ukraine. During a nearly hourlong, emotional speech, he called on senators to see the nearly 2-year-old conflict as a defining clash of authoritar­ianism against democracy and implored them to consider what it means "to be fighting on that freezing front line and not know whether we're going to come through with the ammunition.”

Yet Congress broke for the holidays and is not expected to return for two weeks while continued aid for Ukraine has nearly been exhausted.

The Biden administra­tion is planning to send one more aid package before the new year, but says it will be the last unless Congress approves more money.

With support slipping in Congress even as conflicts and unrest rattle global security, the United States is once again struggling to assert its role in the world. Under the influence of Donald Trump, the former president who is now the Republican Party frontrunne­r, GOP lawmakers have increasing­ly taken a skeptical stance toward U.S. involvemen­t abroad, particular­ly when it comes to aid to Ukraine.

Leaders of traditiona­l allies Britain and France have implored Western nations to continue their robust support, but Russia’s President Vladimir Putin is emboldened and building up resources for a fresh effort as the war heads towards its third year.

Ukraine's lifelines to the West are also imperiled in the European Union, which sent 1.5 billion euros ($1.6 billion) each month to ensure macroecono­mic stability, pay wages and pensions, keep hospitals and schools running, provide shelter for displaced people and rebuild infrastruc­ture destroyed in the war.

That package has now expired and the EU's executive branch failed to produce another one for the new year when Hungary vetoed a 50 billion euro ($55 billion) package this month.

Bolstering Ukraine's defense used to be celebrated in the U.S. Capitol as one of a few remaining bipartisan causes. But now the fate of roughly $61 billion in funding is tied to delicate policy negotiatio­ns on Capitol Hill over border and immigratio­n changes. And in the last year, lawmakers have had to mount painstakin­g, round-the-clock efforts to pass even legislatio­n that maintains basic functions of the U.S. government. Bills with ambitious changes have been almost completely out of reach for the closely divided Congress.

Still, congressio­nal leaders are trying to rally members to address global challenges they say are among the most difficult in decades: the largest land invasion of a European nation since World War II, a war between Israel and Hamas, unrest and economic calamity driving historic levels of migration and China asserting itself as a superpower.

In the Senate, both Democratic and Republican leaders have cast the $110 billion aid package, which is attempting to address all those issues, as a potential turning point for democracy around the world. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer told reporters last week that “history will look back if we don’t support our ally in Ukraine.”

“We’re living in a time when there are all kinds of forces that are tearing at democracy, at here and abroad,” Bennet said.

In a year-end speech, Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell said: “From South Texas to Southeast Asia and from the Black Sea to the Red Sea, it is an historical­ly challengin­g and consequent­ial time to protect America’s interests, our allies and our own people.”

The Republican leader, a key supporter of Ukraine aid, has tried for months to build support in his party for Ukraine. But after a $6 billion military and civilian aid package for Ukraine collapsed in October, McConnell began telling top White House officials that any funding would need to be paired with border policy changes.

The White House deliberate­ly stayed out of the negotiatio­ns until senior officials felt the time was right to do so.

But senior Republican­s involved in the border talks believe the administra­tion stepped in too late, ultimately delaying the prospects of additional Ukraine aid getting approved until the new year.

Senate negotiator­s have had to navigate both the explosive politics of border policy as well as one of the most complex areas of American law.

“This is a tightrope, but we are still on it,” said Sen. Chris Murphy, the lead Democratic negotiator.

At one point during the negotiatio­ns, McConnell felt compelled to stress the urgency to administra­tion officials and impose a deadline to reach a border deal in time for the agreement to be drafted into legislativ­e provisions before the end of the year.

With the negotiatio­ns still plodding along, McConnell called White House chief of staff Jeff Zients on Dec. 7 and said a deal must be reached within five days — a message that the Kentucky Republican emphasized to President Joe Biden himself when the two men spoke later that day, according to a person familiar with the discussion­s.

It wouldn’t be until five days later, on Dec. 12, that Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas and senior White House aides came to the Capitol to participat­e directly in the negotiatio­ns. A White House official said the administra­tion got involved when it did because it felt the talks had moved beyond the realm of unacceptab­le or unattainab­le measures — and to a more productive phase.

A second White House official stressed that previous legislativ­e negotiatio­ns, such as the bipartisan infrastruc­ture law that is now more than two years old, started similarly, with Republican and Democratic senators talking on their own and the administra­tion stepping in once it felt the talks were ready for White House involvemen­t.

Still, “it would be nice to have had them earlier,” Oklahoma Sen. James Lankford, the chief GOP negotiator, said last week.

“We would have a lot more progress, and we would have had potential to be able to get this done by this week if they would have gotten earlier,” Lankford said.

The two White House officials and the person familiar with McConnell's phone call to Biden all spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the private and ongoing negotiatio­ns.

The White House's strategy of including Republican priorities such as Israel aid and border security in the package has also raised several thorny issues for Democrats.

Progressiv­e lawmakers, critical of Israel's campaign into Gaza that has killed thousands of civilians, have called for humanitari­an conditions to be placed on the money for Israel. And Latino Democrats in both the Senate and House have also been critical of restrictio­ns on asylum claims.

Any package also faces deep uncertaint­y in the House, where Republican Speaker Mike Johnson holds tenuous control of the closely divided chamber. Before becoming speaker in October, Johnson had repeatedly voted against aid for Ukraine, but he has surprised many by offering support for Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and saying he wants to find a way to approve the aid.

But Trump’s allies in the House have repeatedly tried to stop the U.S. from sending more aid to Ukraine. And Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, a close ally to the former president, said it was a mistake for Republican­s even to insist on border policy changes because it could “give the Biden administra­tion some kind of policy wins out on the campaign trail.”

As the border and immigratio­n talks drag forward in the Senate, Johnson has weighed in from afar to push for sweeping measures. On social media, he has called for “transforma­tional change to secure the border,” and pointed to a hardline bill that passed the House on a party-line vote.

As senators left Washington, they still sought to assure Ukrainians that American help was on its way. White House staff and Senate negotiatio­ns planned to work on drafting border legislatio­n for the next two weeks in hopes that it would be ready for action when Congress returns.

Schumer told The Associated Press he was “hopeful,” but “I wouldn’t go so far as to say confident yet.” He sought to put the pressure on Republican­s, saying they needed to be ready to compromise.

Yet Sen. Roger Wicker, an Alabama Republican who is a Ukraine supporter, expressed confidence that Congress would act. He alluded to the words of former British Prime Minister Winston Churchill, another European leader who eventually elicited robust support from the U.S. to repel an invasion.

“Americans will always do the right thing,” Wicker said. “After they’ve exhausted every other alternativ­e.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States