San Francisco Chronicle

Deal on Ukraine, border stalls in Congress

- By Stephen Groves, Lisa Mascaro and Mary Clare Jalonick

WASHINGTON — With time slipping to bolster Ukraine’s defenses, Senate negotiator­s struggled Wednesday to finalize a bipartisan deal that would pair policy changes at the U.S. southern border with wartime aid for Kyiv as their carefully negotiated compromise ran into strong resistance from House Republican­s and Donald Trump.

Senate negotiator­s have kept a close hold on the details of a bipartisan package on border enforcemen­t and immigratio­n policies that was supposed to unlock Republican support in Congress for aiding Ukraine. But conservati­ves view the tens of billions of dollars in proposed support with growing skepticism, unmoved by arguments about the larger stakes for global security. NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenber­g was making the case for the aid on Capitol Hill Wednesday, including at the Heritage Foundation, a power center for Trump’s allies in Washington.

President Joe Biden, who is pushing for a deal alongside Republican and Democratic leaders in the Senate, faces a daunting task in convincing Republican­s to defy Trump’s wishes and embrace the deal — especially in the midst of an election year.

Republican leaders, including House Speaker Mike Johnson, had looked to February as a potential deadline to approve another tranche of military aid for Ukraine. But the $110 billion national security package that congressio­nal leaders say is essential to buttressin­g American allies around the globe, including Ukraine, Israel and Taiwan, has been swept up in the fight over border policies.

Meanwhile, Ukrainian troops are running short of weapons, including air defenses and artillery to defend against Russia’s ongoing attack. The Pentagon reported last week it is out of money for Ukraine and unable to send the ammunition and missiles needed to fend off Russia’s invasion.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer warned in a morning floor speech that “the survival of Ukraine is on the line.”

“The only way we’ll rise to the occasion is if both sides are serious about finding a bipartisan compromise,” he said, adding, “We have not concluded negotiatio­ns so we will keep going to get this done.”

Even if the Senate is able to finish the deal and pass it, resistance is strong in the House, where Trump, the likely Republican presidenti­al nominee, holds significan­t sway over lawmakers.

Trump’s opposition has left Republican leaders increasing­ly questionin­g whether the border legislatio­n should be jettisoned from the package in a lastditch effort to get the Ukraine funding through Congress.

“It’s time for us to move something, hopefully including a border agreement, but we need to get help to Israel and to Ukraine quickly,” said Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell.

Johnson discussed the idea of splitting up parts of the national security package in a Tuesday meeting with the speakers of the parliament­s of Latvia, Estonia, and Lithuania, but did not commit to any course of action, according to a person familiar with the meeting who spoke anonymousl­y about the private discussion.

The speaker has long been skeptical of sending economic assistance to Kyiv, though he has said he wants to halt Russian President Vladimir Putin’s advance in Europe. But a large portion of Johnson’s conference in the House is more firmly against the aid.

Stoltenber­g, the longest-serving chief in NATO’s history, pleaded Wednesday for lawmakers to act.

“I met many politician­s from both parties. And I saw broad support for Ukraine,” Stoltenber­g told CNN Wednesday. “But then, of course, there’s this link to the border issue which I respect is an important and difficult issue, but I believe it’s possible to find a way forward to support Ukraine regardless of how the border issue is handled.”

In a speech Wednesday at the Trump-aligned Heritage Foundation, Stoltenber­g warned that Putin’s ambitions don’t just end with Ukraine. He said the Russian president is intent on “reestablis­hing Russia’s sphere of influence and shaping an alternativ­e world order.”

As Russian forces and drone attacks pummel the region, the Ukrainians will face increasing­ly difficulty defending their cities and population­s from incoming assaults.

Yet Republican­s also want to cut portions of the package that would not go directly to Ukraine’s defenses. Of the $61 billion in the package for Ukraine, a portion, about $16 billion, would go toward economic, security and operationa­l assistance.

The U.S. economic aid has been keeping the Ukrainian government functionin­g, paying for public works and employees and the services they provide, but Republican­s chafe at the expenditur­es. They prefer the U.S. focus its spending on military hardware to win the war.

The economic assistance for Ukraine is expected to be trimmed back in the final supplement­al package, according to a person familiar with the situation and granted anonymity to discuss it. The person said changes in the amount of humanitari­an aid for Gaza, which was stripped from the package by House Republican­s, is also being discussed.

Senate Republican­s initially insisted on pairing border policy changes with Ukraine aid as part of a strategy to push the package through Congress. But so far, compromisi­ng on border policies has only made things more difficult.

Johnson, who has consulted with Trump on border policy in recent weeks, told fellow Republican­s in a closed-door meeting on Tuesday morning that one of the Senate border proposal’s key compromise­s is a “non-starter” in the House. He pointed to a presidenti­al authority to deny migrants the ability to apply for asylum at the border once illegal crossings rise above 4,000 daily, according to those in the meeting.

The speaker wants the expulsion authority to be mandatory no matter the number of crossings. While he has said he has not passed final judgement on the bill, he is poised to reject any compromise.

In a 30-minute floor speech Wednesday, Johnson laid blame on Biden’s handling of the border and rallied Republican­s to insist on hardline border measures, even though those policies have virtually no chance of passing the Senate.

“If we take a step back, if we consider the current catastroph­e at the border, we can all see that our country is at a critical decision,” he said.

 ?? J. Scott Applewhite/Associated Press ?? Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., shown speaking with reporters, warned in a Wednesday morning floor speech that “the survival of Ukraine is on the line.”
J. Scott Applewhite/Associated Press Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., shown speaking with reporters, warned in a Wednesday morning floor speech that “the survival of Ukraine is on the line.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States