The Denver Post

House to vote on Israeli aid without Ukraine funds this week

- By Erik Wasson

The U. S. House will vote this week on an standalone $ 17.6 billion Israel aid package without any Ukraine aid, Speaker Mike Johnson said Saturday.

Johnson said the move is needed to get aid to Israel quickly in its battle with Hamas in the Gaza Strip because there is no time to consider a package that combines aid to Ukraine and Israel with U. S.- Mexico border security provisions. That proposal is set to be released soon by the Senate after lengthy negotiatio­ns.

The Israel bill unveiled Saturday is the latest sign that House Republican­s are prepared to delay action on Ukraine aid indefinite­ly because of disputes over U. S. migration policy. Aid for Israel is far more popular within the House GOP than aid to Ukraine.

The bill includes funds for Israel’s Iron Dome and Iron Beam missile defense systems, funds for U. S. military operations in the Middle East and enhanced protection for U. S. personnel at embassies.

It won’t have offsetting spending cuts, unlike a $ 14 billion Israel aid bill that passed the House over Democratic objections.

“Given the Senate’s failure to move appropriat­e legislatio­n in a timely fashion, and the perilous circumstan­ces currently facing Israel, the House will continue to lead,” Johnson said in a letter to colleagues.

“During debate in the House and in numerous subsequent statements, Democrats made clear that their primary objection to the original House bill was with its offsets,” he said. “The Senate will no longer have excuses, however misguided, against swift passage of this critical support for our ally.

The bill seeks to address U. S. military funding needs for the buildup in operations in the Middle East after the Oct. 7 Hamas attack on Israel and Israel’s subsequent military incursion in the Hamas- controlled Gaza Strip.

Iranian- backed groups have attacked Red Sea shipping and American troops and allies stationed in Iraq and Syria since Oct. 7.

The House proposal would provide $ 3.3 billion to fund the United States’ response and $ 200 million

for protection of U. S. personnel and evacuation­s of U. S. citizens.

The Pentagon is operating under a stopgap funding measure and would otherwise need emergency spending to pay for its

ramp- up.

The original House bill claimed to pay for Israel aid by cutting Internal Revenue Service tax enforcemen­t funding. Democrats said that move would have widened the U. S. budget deficit due to revenue losses from increased tax cheating.

Johnson has said that a reported bipartisan bordersecu­rity deal being finalized in the Senate is dead on arrival in the House. That deal, granting the president new powers to swiftly deport migrants, is to be attached to Ukraine and Israel aid and is slated to come up for procedural vote on Wednesday in the Senate.

“While the Senate appears poised to finally release text of their supplement­al package after months of behind closed doors negotiatio­ns, their leadership is aware that by failing to include the House in their negotiatio­ns, they have eliminated the ability for swift considerat­ion of any legislatio­n,” Johnson said in the letter.

 ?? YURI GRIPAS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? House Republican­s plan to vote on a $ 17.6 billion bill for aid to Israel that doesn’t include any money for Ukraine, Speaker Mike Johnson of Louisiana said Saturday.
YURI GRIPAS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS House Republican­s plan to vote on a $ 17.6 billion bill for aid to Israel that doesn’t include any money for Ukraine, Speaker Mike Johnson of Louisiana said Saturday.

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