Detroit Free Press

Speaker presses for border security

Johnson seeks changes in deals for Ukraine, Israel aid

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

Stephen Groves and Lisa Mascaro

WASHINGTON – House Speaker Mike Johnson told fellow Republican­s on Tuesday that sweeping changes to U.S. border policy would be their “hill to die on” in negotiatio­ns over President Joe Biden’s nearly $106 billion package for the wars in Ukraine and Israel and other security needs.

Johnson delivered the hard-line message Tuesday morning ahead of classified briefings the Biden administra­tion organized to underscore how desperatel­y the aid is needed. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy was scheduled to address the senators via video but had to cancel his appearance, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said.

Biden is pushing a reluctant Congress to approve the military, economic and humanitari­an aid package, but the injection of border security into the negotiatio­ns has made progress difficult.

“The battle is for the border,” Johnson said at a news conference. “We do that first as a top priority, and we’ll take care of these other obligation­s.”

Moments earlier, Johnson told GOP lawmakers in a closed-door meeting that their “hill to die on” in the negotiatio­ns was border policy, according to a Republican in the meeting. Conservati­ves are pressing for the provisions in H.R. 2, a bill they passed in May that would restart constructi­on of walls along the southern border and make it drasticall­y more difficult for migrants to claim asylum in the U.S.

Johnson reiterated his stance in a letter to the White House on Tuesday, one day after officials warned that the U.S. will run out of funding to send weapons and assistance to Ukraine by the end of the year, threatenin­g its ability to fight Russia’s invasion.

In the Senate, Schumer was pushing toward a test vote Wednesday on the emergency funding for Ukraine, Israel, and other national security needs, but without the border provisions Republican­s are demanding. He described the package as crucial to ensuring the future of Ukraine and democracy.

“This is a turning point in Western civilizati­on,” Schumer told reporters at a news conference.

Schumer added that Johnson told him in a private meeting that he could not pass the supplement­al package through the House without H.R. 2 attached.

The GOP’s demands could imperil any legislatio­n that emerges from the Senate, where a bipartisan group is trying to find agreement on a pared-down set of border policy proposals. Republican­s in those negotiatio­ns have acknowledg­ed they are not insisting on the broad policies included in the House’s legislatio­n, creating a schism between the two chambers.

Sen. James Lankford, R-Okla., said it was “not rational” to expect the closely divided Senate to pass a bill that didn’t gain a single Democratic vote in the House.

“You can’t make law like that,” Lankford said. “We have to make law.”

The Senate negotiatio­ns have centered on a proposal to raise the initial threshold for migrants to enter the asylum system, as well as limiting the executive branch’s ability to admit migrants through humanitari­an parole.

Democrats took a step back from the talks earlier this week, saying that Republican­s were unwilling to compromise.

 ?? ANGERER/GETTY IMAGES
DREW ?? Speaker of the House Mike Johnson, left, delivered the hard-line message Tuesday ahead of classified briefings the Biden administra­tion organized to underscore how desperatel­y aid is needed.
ANGERER/GETTY IMAGES DREW Speaker of the House Mike Johnson, left, delivered the hard-line message Tuesday ahead of classified briefings the Biden administra­tion organized to underscore how desperatel­y aid is needed.

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