New York Post

Joe fumbles SOTU invites 0 for 2 on Mrs. Zel & Navalny

- By RYAN KING

Ukraine First Lady Olena Zelenska rejected an invite to President Biden’s State of the Union address Thursday, citing a scheduling conflict.

The White House had planned to seat Zelenska near Yulia Navalnaya, the widow of Russian dissident Alexei Navalny — but that plan did not go over well with the Ukrainians, The Washington Post reported Tuesday.

Despite Navalny being a global symbol of resistance to Russian President Vladimir Putin, his public comments on Ukraine — including his stated conviction that Crimea belongs to Russia — complicate his legacy in Kyiv.

“Due to scheduled events, including a visit of children from an orphanage to Kyiv, which was planned in advance, the first lady will unfortunat­ely not be able to attend the event,” Tetiana Haiduchenk­o, Zelenska’s press secretary, told The New

York Times.

Navalnaya also declined an invite to Biden’s address, citing exhaustion. Her hus16 band died Feb. in an

Arctic prison under suspicious circumstan­ces.

Biden has called Putin “responsibl­e” for

Navalny’s death and slapped sanctions on the Kremlin in response.

“Yulia was indeed invited and considered going, but I think everyone forgets the circumstan­ces against which the events unfolded,” Navalnaya spokeswoma­n Kira Yarmysh told The Washington Post. “Yulia’s husband died two weeks ago. She’s been traveling all this time. Today is the first day she’s been home at all. Like any human being, she needs time to recover, and so while she very much appreciate­s the invitation, she needs to recover at least a little now.”

Biden met with Navalnaya and her daughter, Dasha, in San Francisco six days after Navalny’s death was made public.

Biden’s overture to Zelenska comes as the president is trying to ratchet up presCongre­ss sure on to replenish military aid to the war-torn nation, which has struggled with critical ammunition shortages on the battlefiel­d.

A $95 billion supplement­al package that includes roughly $60 billion in support for Ukraine cleared the Senate last month but hasn’t been taken up by the House of Representa­tives.

The White House and the Ukrainian Embassy in Washington did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

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