Las Vegas Review-Journal

White House must come to table on aid package

- The views expressed above are those of the Las Vegas Review-journal. All other opinions expressed on the Opinion and Commentary pages are those of the individual artist or author indicated.

The White House must get serious about reaching a deal with Republican­s over aid to Ukraine and border security. It’s time for President Joe Biden to end the bluster and work toward compromise.

On Wednesday, Senate Republican­s blocked the administra­tion’s $111 billion package on a procedural vote that required support from 60 senators for the legislatio­n to advance. The measure bundles financial assistance to Ukraine, Israel and Taiwan with increased funding for U.S. border security.

At issue are additional measures intended to stem the flow of illegal migrants over the southern border. Republican­s argue the current bill fails to include policy changes they believe will reduce the number of border crossings.

“Republican­s think they get everything they want, without any bipartisan compromise,” Mr. Biden said. “That’s not the answer.”

Yet Republican­s have indeed compromise­d. Clearly the GOP is willing to give in on Ukraine — many Republican­s in both the House and Senate have expressed hesitation about further funding that nation’s war with Russia — as long as the president and Democrats do the same on border security.

Given the scope of the immigratio­n disaster the Biden administra­tion has created, this is hardly unreasonab­le. The GOP priorities include measures to tighten the much-abused asylum screening process and more efficient detention policies that would discourage catch-and-release tactics.

“As we’ve said for weeks, legislatio­n that doesn’t include policy changes to secure our borders will not pass the Senate,” Minority Leader Mitch Mcconnell reiterated this week. He added, “Apparently some of our colleagues would rather let Russia trample a sovereign nation in Europe than do what it takes to enforce America’s own sovereign borders. They’re convinced open borders are worth jeopardizi­ng security around the world.”

Despite the rhetoric, the conditions for a deal are in place. Both sides agree on aid to Israel. Both sides control one legislativ­e chamber. Republican­s in the House are more likely to stomach the legislatio­n if it contains the stronger border security measures that their Senate counterpar­ts are demanding. Even the president has conceded the problems at the border, saying, “We need to fix the broken border system. It is broken.” Senate Republican­s have signaled a willingnes­s to negotiate.

If “Republican­s are going to move, and we’re going to move, then let’s sit down and talk,” Sen. Chris Murphy, D-conn., told The Wall Street Journal.

While the GOP typically gets blamed for deadlocks, the real issue is whether the White House will stand up to vocal progressiv­e agitators who favor open borders, a policy wholly rejected by the vast majority of the electorate.

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