East Bay Times

Speaker Johnson unveils a complicate­d proposal for passing wartime aid

- By Stephen Groves and Lisa Mascaro

>> House Speaker Mike Johnson on Monday unveiled a complicate­d proposal for passing wartime aid for Israel, Ukraine and Taiwan, leaving its path to passage deeply uncertain as he rejected pressure to simply approve a package sent over by the Senate.

The Republican speaker huddled with fellow GOP lawmakers Monday evening to lay out his strategy to gain House approval for the funding package. Facing an outright rebellion from conservati­ves fiercely opposed to aiding Ukraine, Johnson said he would push to get the package to the House floor under a single debate rule, then hold separate votes on aid for Ukraine, Israel, Taiwan and several foreign policy proposals, according to Republican lawmakers.

However, the package would deviate from the $95 billion aid package passed by the Senate in February, clouding its prospects for final passage in Congress.

Iran's missile and drone strike against Israel over the weekend put renewed pressure on House Republican­s to act on the national security package after Johnson had spent the past two months mulling how to advance it through the political divides in the House.

As the House has struggled to act, conflicts around the globe have escalated. Israel's military chief said Monday that his country will respond to Iran's weekend missile strike. And Ukraine's military head over the weekend warned that the battlefiel­d situation in the country's east has “significan­tly worsened in recent days,” as warming weather has allowed Russian forces to launch a fresh offensive.

Meanwhile, President Joe Biden, hosting Czech Prime Minister Petr Fiala at the White House, called on the House to take up the Senate funding package immediatel­y. “They have to do it now,” he said.

In the Capitol, Johnson's approach could further incite the populist conservati­ves who are already angry at his direction as speaker.

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, a Georgia Republican, is already threatenin­g to push to oust him as speaker. As she entered the closed-door Republican meeting on Monday, she said her message to the speaker was, “Don't fund Ukraine.”

The GOP meeting was filled with lawmakers at odds in their approach to Ukraine: Republican defense hawks, including the top lawmakers on national security committees, who want Johnson to finally take up the national security supplement­al package as a bundle, are pitted against populist conservati­ves who are fiercely opposed to continued support for Kyiv's fight at all.

Senior Republican­s and Democrats were also growing impatient after Johnson had offered them assurances that he would bring Ukraine aid to the floor.

“The House must rush to Israel's aid as quickly as humanly possible, and the only way to do that is passing the Senate's supplement­al ASAP,” said Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States