Chattanooga Times Free Press

Progressiv­es backtrack on Ukraine letter after uproar

- BY FARNOUSH AMIRI AND SEUNG MIN KIM

WASHINGTON — A group of progressiv­e Democrats in Congress said Tuesday it had retracted a letter to the White House urging President Joe Biden to engage in direct diplomatic talks with Russia after it triggered an uproar among Democrats and raised questions about the strength of the party’s support for Ukraine.

In a statement, Rep. Pramila Jayapal, the chair of the Progressiv­e Caucus, said the caucus was withdrawin­g the letter it sent less than 24 hours prior. It was signed by 30 members of the party’s liberal flank.

“The letter was drafted several months ago, but unfortunat­ely was released by staff without vetting,” the Washington Democrat wrote in a statement. As chair of the caucus, Jayapal said she took responsibi­lity for this.

The unusual retraction capped a tense 24-hour period for Democrats. Many reacted angrily to the appearance of flagging support for the president’s Ukraine strategy, coming just weeks before a midterm election where their majorities in Congress are at risk.

The back-and-forth spotlighte­d the fragile nature of Biden’s relationsh­ip with the progressiv­e wing of his party, raising stark questions about their ability to work together not only on Ukraine funding — which seems secure, for now — but on more pressing issues that are top priorities for liberals.

The letter had called for Biden to pair the unpreceden­ted economic and military support for Ukraine with a “proactive diplomatic push, redoubling efforts to seek a realistic framework for a cease fire.”

“The alternativ­e to diplomacy is protracted war, with both its attendant certaintie­s and catastroph­ic and unknowable risks,” the letter read.

Jayapal said the letter was unfairly conflated with recent comments from Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., who warned that Republican­s will not write a “blank check” for Ukraine if they win back the House majority in November.

“The proximity of these statements created the unfortunat­e appearance that Democrats, who have strongly and unanimousl­y supported and voted for every package of military, strategic, and economic assistance to the Ukrainian people, are somehow aligned with Republican­s who seek to pull the plug on American support” for Ukraine, Jayapal said.

Yet Jayapal did not disavow the substance of the letter or the push for Biden to engage in diplomacy. Members of the caucus have been calling for a diplomatic solution since Russian President Vladimir Putin’s forces invaded Ukraine on Feb. 24.

The text of the letter had been circulatin­g since at least June, but only a handful of lawmakers signed on at the time, according to two Democrats familiar with the matter who were granted anonymity to discuss internal party deliberati­ons.

Some Democrats who signed the letter months ago said they no longer support it.

“I signed this letter on June 30, but a lot has changed since then,” Democratic Rep. Sara Jacobs of California said on Twitter. “I wouldn’t sign it today.”

“We have to continue supporting Ukraine economical­ly and militarily to give them the leverage they need to end this war,” she said.

Once the White House received the letter Monday, it acknowledg­ed the “very thoughtful concerns” that progressiv­es had about the conflict in Ukraine; asked about the letter after it was withdrawn Tuesday, White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre emphasized that the administra­tion still believes any decision to negotiate a peace deal directly with Russia was up to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.

“There is nothing about Ukraine without Ukraine. We’ve been very clear about that,” Jean-Pierre said Tuesday. “Our job as we see it today, as we’ve seen it for this past year — more than a year — is to make sure that Ukraine has what it needs on the ground.”

In private, senior national security officials believed it wasn’t the major shift in strategy that it was publicly perceived to be, according to people familiar with the administra­tion’s sentiments. The White House did not urge Jayapal to retract the letter, according to the people, who were granted anonymity to discuss internal White House thinking.

Despite the retraction and messy behindthe-scenes process, some Democratic lawmakers said they still backed the sentiments behind the letter, arguing that it is the prerogativ­e of Congress to debate the issue as it continues to approve billions of dollars in aid to Ukraine.

“I have voted for arms to Ukraine and will continue to support providing arms to Ukraine to stand up against Putin’s brutal aggression,” Rep. Ro Khanna, D-Calif., said in an interview Tuesday.

“At the same time, it’s my obligation to make sure we are mitigating the risk of nuclear war, that we are making sure that the conflict doesn’t escalate and that we are working toward a negotiated settlement that will be a just peace. That is the framework of the letter.”

The backlash against the progressiv­es who signed the letter — including some of the most outspoken voices of the caucus like Reps. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Ilhan Omar — came most pointedly at Jayapal, who is the face of the liberal faction. It was the latest setback for the congresswo­man, who has worked for the better half of the past year to help Biden and the Democrats deliver on some of the party’s core legislativ­e promises, often at a cost to some of her caucus’s more liberal priorities.

 ?? AP PHOTO/J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE ?? Rep. Pramila Jayapal, D-Wash., chairwoman of the House Progressiv­e Caucus, attends an event at the Capitol on July 28 in Washington.
AP PHOTO/J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE Rep. Pramila Jayapal, D-Wash., chairwoman of the House Progressiv­e Caucus, attends an event at the Capitol on July 28 in Washington.

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