The Capital

Md. Dems press GOP to pass Ukraine aid

Senate has already passed $95B bill

- By Katharine Wilson

Maryland’s House Democrats are criticizin­g Speaker Mike Johnson, R-Louisiana, for refusing to hear the Senate-approved foreign aid package that includes Ukraine and Israel.

“Give the victims of Putin’s war crimes a vote, Mr. Speaker,” Rep. Steny Hoyer, D-Maryland, said on the House floor Thursday. “Give Ukraine hope, Mr. Speaker. Tell Putin: ‘Nyet.’ Every minute we don’t signals retreat instead of resolve.”

The Senate passed the $95 billion national security supplement­al spending bill on Tuesday. The measure would allot funding, including military support and humanitari­an aid, for Ukraine, Israel, Gaza and Taiwan.

Johnson has firmly rejected calls to put the bill to a vote in the House due to the lack of border security legislatio­n. But the speaker also has rejected a bipartisan compromise on border security crafted in the Senate.

In a Monday statement, Johnson said House Republican­s were “crystal clear” that national security supplement­al legislatio­n “must recognize that national security begins at our own border.”

The foreign aid bill was attached to border security legislatio­n until Senate Republican­s voted against the bill Wednesday because they said the border policies didn’t go far enough. Majority Leader Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-New York, then introduced the new bill without border legislatio­n.

The national security package passed 70-29, with support from 22 Republican senators.

Hoyer said if Johnson were to put the bill on the House floor, it would have at least 300 votes to pass.

“The question is not whether this legislatio­n would receive enough votes to pass this house,” Hoyer said. “The question is whether Speaker Johnson will give us the opportunit­y to vote on it at all. Refusal to do so is causing Ukrainians to die.”

The congressma­n further said that Russian leader Vladimir Putin “salivates” at the inaction of the “isolationi­st or authoritar­ian loving factions” of House Republican­s.

Rep. David Trone, who is running in the Maryland Democratic primary for the Senate, called Johnson’s reluctance to bring the foreign aid bill a “derelictio­n of duty and a shameless abandonmen­t of America’s allies” in an X post Tuesday.

Trone added that “it’s time for House Republican­s to step up and govern.”

Rep. Jamie Raskin, D— Maryland, accused House Republican­s of taking orders from former President Donald Trump in a Wednesday interview with MSNBC. Raskin said the Senate was the best hope for bipartisan compromise­s, adding that the House Republican­s fall in line with those on the MAGA right.

“I think our best hope for trying to torture out some bipartisan compromise­s that will allow America to stand on the side of freedom and democracy and human rights around the world is on the Senate side,” Raskin said.

In an email statement to Capital News Service, Rep. John Sarbanes, D—Maryland, said the aid bill is the “right framework” for moving forward on critical priorities and encouraged Johnson to consider the measure.

“The Senate took a crucial step in supporting our allies Israel and Ukraine and addressing the humanitari­an crisis in Gaza,” Sarbanes said. “I urge Speaker Johnson to give it the considerat­ion it deserves.”

Some House Democrats, including Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D—New York, seem to support using a discharge petition to circumvent the unwavering speaker.

Jeffries said Tuesday he would use “every available legislativ­e tool” to move the aid bill forward.

A discharge petition would require a majority of House members to pass. With the Republican­s holding a narrow 219-213 advantage, Democrats would have to find some Republican­s willing to go against their party leadership.

The Senate-approved bill would allocate $60 billion to support Ukraine’s defense against Russia, including funding to allow

Ukraine to re-arm itself and to receive U.S. military intelligen­ce and training support.

The Senate slated $14 billion for security assistance to Israel. This would fund Israel’s missile defense capabiliti­es and the Iron Beam missile defense system — a laser system that can detect and strike incoming missiles.

Another $9 billion would go towards humanitari­an assistance to population­s in war zones and potential regions of conflict, including Ukraine, Gaza and the West Bank, East Africa and South Asia.

Maryland’s two senators, who voted for the package, have expressed concerns about both the treacherou­s political road the bill went down and policies left in and out of the final measure.

Sen. Chris Van Hollen, D—Maryland, said earlier this week it was critical to pass humanitari­an aid and to deploy resources to protect democracy around the world, including to Ukraine, which the senator said is running “dangerousl­y low on ammunition and other vital supplies.”

“We know all too well that this is not only a fight to save Ukraine — our adversarie­s and allies alike are watching closely, and the outcome will have implicatio­ns on American security and security across the globe,” Van Hollen said in a statement.

Van Hollen said that while he supports funding for defensive weapons and Israel’s right to defend itself, the “humanitari­an catastroph­e” in Gaza is too great to ignore.

“While a war may be just, it must be fought justly. I cannot support a blank check for the Netanyahu government’s current campaign in Gaza,” Van Hollen said. Sen. Ben Cardin, D-Maryland, said earlier this week that while the passage of the foreign aid bill was a “cause for celebratio­n,” partisansh­ip is blocking final passage.

The senator also said the lack of a border policy in the bill “represents a failure of governance and a disservice to our national security.”

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