Las Vegas Review-Journal

Democrats prepare to ride to Johnson’s rescue, gingerly

- By Caitlin Reilly, Aidan Quigley and David Lerman

WASHINGTON — House Democrats hinted Thursday that they were committed to passing a foreign aid supplement­al package even if it meant helping Republican leaders get past usually party-line procedural hurdles — and potentiall­y helping a GOP speaker keep his gavel.

Speaker Mike Johnson, R-LA., is moving to set up Saturday votes on three bills that would send aid to Ukraine, Israel and the Indo-pacific. The measures would then be combined with a fourth bill comprising a hodgepodge of bipartisan priorities — many of which have previously passed the House — including sanctions on Russia and Iran and a modified version of a bill to force the sale of Tiktok.

It’s unlikely Johnson has the Republican votes needed to adopt a rule that would provide for floor considerat­ion of the four measures, given criticism from the party’s right flank. Democratic leadership has not explicitly committed to helping Johnson out on the rule but said they would do what was needed to see the legislatio­n across the finish line.

“We’re going to do what we’ve done throughout the entirety of the Congress, which is to make sure we take care of the business of the American people,” said Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y. “We have consistent­ly done that. No one has to ask whether we will shirk our responsibi­lities when every major piece of legislatio­n that has passed during the 118th Congress has passed with a majority of Democrats and in many cases a minority of Republican­s.”

Rules are typically seen as the responsibi­lity of the majority party to adopt, but in rare cases, the minority has backed a rule poised to fail when they want to see the underlying legislatio­n pass. Democrats did so earlier this Congress with permission from their leadership when some voted to adopt the rule providing for the considerat­ion of the law that suspended the debt ceiling.

Many Democrats leaving a caucus meeting Thursday morning declined to say whether they would support the rule on the floor, saying they were waiting for instructio­ns from their leadership.

Rep. Wiley Nickel, a moderate Democrat from North Carolina, said he would like to see the situation play out as it did with the debt ceiling.

“I just personally think that’s

the right way to do it,” Nickel said of the rule vote last June. “There’s plenty of Democrats who can vote for rules, but we want leadership to have a seat at the table to make sure we’re working together in a bipartisan way to get the right result for the American people.”

Rep. Mike Quigley, D-ill., who traveled to Ukraine with colleagues earlier this month, went further, saying he would do what was needed to get aid to the country passed.

“It’s my intention to make sure that these bills pass regardless of how we handle it,” he said. “Procedural­ly, I can’t speak for other Democrats, but it’s my intention to get these bills across the finish line.”

Rep. Rosa Delauro of Connecticu­t, the top Democrat on the Appropriat­ions Committee, said the bills would not go down on Democrats’ watch.

“Democrats will not be responsibl­e for this bill failing,” she said when asked whether her colleagues would allow the rule to fall short.

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-cortez, D-N.Y., who opposes the Israel aid bill, said Democrats “may very well be” stepping in to ensure the rule is adopted.

Before the rule can come to the floor, it needs to be approved by the Rules Committee, which convened Thursday morning to tackle parameters for floor debate.

Opposition from conservati­ves on the panel could force Democrats to come to the Republican leadership’s aid to bring the rule to the floor. Committee member Ralph Norman, R-S.C., said he would vote against the rule because of the lack of action on a border security bill acceptable to House Republican­s.

“Our only ask was to include a border bill,” Norman continued, “not a standalone which the Senate will sit on.”

Another GOP conservati­ve on Rules, Chip Roy of Texas, also said he was opposed to the rule.

“We’ve literally done nothing but borrow money to fund conflict for the last 25 years,” Roy said. “That plus border equals problems with the rule.”

Motion to vacate

By bringing Ukraine aid to the floor, Johnson has put his own job in jeopardy. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-GA., filed a motion to vacate the speakershi­p this month.

Rep. Thomas Massie, R-KY., also backs the motion, meaning Johnson may again have to turn to Democrats, this time to save his job.

Democrats on Thursday said the motion to vacate didn’t come up at their morning caucus meeting, but some hinted their party could help Johnson stay in his position.

Rep. Adam Schiff, D-calif., said Johnson had earned a lot of goodwill among Democrats by bringing up the Ukraine aid, in defiance of members of the speaker’s own party who wanted to see border security attached to any supplement­al package.

“If he brings up the Ukraine funding bill in good faith and without poison pills and does the right thing, there’ll be a lot of sentiment in the Democratic caucus, not to want to see him punished for doing the right thing,” said Schiff, the favorite to win his state’s open Senate seat in November. “But we’ll make that decision collective­ly, consulting with our leadership. But Democrats want this place to be governed and governable.”

Quigley said Democrats could skip a vote on the motion to vacate, lowering the threshold Johnson would need to win the support of the majority of voting members.

“I think there are ways Democrats could help,” Quigley said of Johnson. “Who knows, maybe they’ll have an attendance problem.”

Johnson’s backers could offer a motion to table any Greene resolution, which could dispense with the matter quickly if enough Democrats join with Republican­s, or simply skip the vote and bring down the majority threshold.

For her part, Greene wasn’t commenting on her plans or potential timing as she watched what played out in the Rules Committee on Thursday. She was responding to reports that GOP leaders may sneak a House rule change into the rule for floor debate on the supplement­al, which would raise the threshold for triggering a motion to vacate from one to multiple members.

Rep. Dusty Johnson, R-S.D., said Thursday he was pushing for the rule change.

“I’m working with a group of members to change the rule so that they can’t get that done, so that one knucklehea­d can’t put the whole House into disarray by forcing another speaker vote,” Johnson said in a video posted to X, formerly Twitter.

If such a provision were included in the rule, Greene said, the speaker owed his conference a meeting to explain himself.

“If he attaches a rule to change the motion to vacate and uses Democrat votes on the Rules Committee, he’s going to prove exactly what I have been saying correct: He is the Democrat speaker,” she said.

It wasn’t clear late Thursday afternoon what the final rule would look like. After he was asked by Massie during the Rules meeting whether raising the motion-tovacate threshold would be included, new

Rules Chairman Michael Burgess, R-texas, said he didn’t know. “I don’t have any direct knowledge of that,” he said.

Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-fla., who triggered the earlier motion to vacate that ousted former Speaker Kevin Mccarthy, R-calif., said he wouldn’t support such a rule change unless paired with a ban on lawmakers’ ability to trade stocks.

Still, Gaetz said he wouldn’t back Greene’s motion at this time because of the potential for Jeffries to become speaker given so many vacancies and potential GOP defections.

Senate timing

The House is poised to consider the foreign aid packages as both chambers ready to leave for a weeklong recess in observance of Passover. With the final House vote slated for Saturday, it’s unclear when the Senate would take up the four pieces of legislatio­n, which will be combined into a single package before reaching the chamber.

Sen. James Lankford, R-okla., called the question of when the Senate would take up an expected House-passed security supplement­al package “a Chuck Schumer question,” referring to the Senate majority leader from New York.

“Passover is Monday. And so for a lot of our Jewish members that’s incredibly important to them not to be able to miss that,” he said. “We’re waiting on the House to be able to figure it out if they have a speaker on Saturday, and if they actually pass this on Saturday.”

Lankford said it is “100% possible” the Senate puts off floor work on the anticipate­d supplement­al until Tuesday or Wednesday of next week, which is slated to be a recess week.

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-LA., arrives Wednesday at the Capitol in Washington to speak with reporters to discuss his proposal of sending crucial bipartisan support to aid Ukraine, Israel and Taiwan after weeks of inaction. It’s unlikely Johnson has the Republican votes needed to adopt a rule that would provide for f loor considerat­ion of the aid measures. Democratic leadership has said they would do what was needed to see the legislatio­n across the finish line.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE / ASSOCIATED PRESS House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-LA., arrives Wednesday at the Capitol in Washington to speak with reporters to discuss his proposal of sending crucial bipartisan support to aid Ukraine, Israel and Taiwan after weeks of inaction. It’s unlikely Johnson has the Republican votes needed to adopt a rule that would provide for f loor considerat­ion of the aid measures. Democratic leadership has said they would do what was needed to see the legislatio­n across the finish line.

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