The Denver Post

Will Johnson decide to stand up to Trump and Greene?

- By Trudy Rubin Trudy Rubin is a columnist and editorial-board member for the The Philadelph­ia Inquirer.

How grotesque to watch longterm U.S. security interests hang on the outcome of a political battle between the Hamletlike speaker of the House, Mike Johnson, and vengeful MAGA conspiracy theorist Marjorie Taylor Greene.

As Congress returns from Easter break, Johnson still hasn’t made up his mind whether to allow a vote on a bill that includes $60 billion of desperatel­y needed aid for Ukraine — which assuredly would pass.

He could still bow to Greene, who (with a growing number of colleagues) opposes U.S. help for Kyiv. In the topsy-turvy system MAGA zealots have imposed on the GOP House caucus, one Republican ideologue — in this case, the representa­tive from Georgia — can trigger the House speaker’s ouster.

While these two political lightweigh­ts dither, people are dying, as Ukrainian soldiers run out of artillery shells and Russia bombs civilian homes and infrastruc­ture in large Ukrainian cities that lack air defenses.

“If the Congress doesn’t help Ukraine, Ukraine will lose the war,” Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy recently told the country’s local fundraisin­g group, UNITED24. “If Ukraine loses this war, other countries will be attacked.”

Unless Johnson finds some courage, the responsibi­lity for this security debacle will lie on his shoulders. The blood of Ukrainian victims already stains MAGA hands.

The congressio­nal struggle over Ukraine aid has dragged on for six months, as the GOP tried to link it to reforms that limit migration across the southern border. But when the Senate passed a bipartisan aid bill that included strong border reforms, Donald Trump pressured most GOP senators to oppose it.

Because of Trump’s opposition, Johnson has refused to let the House vote on the Senate bill.

Trump and his acolytes seem blissfully blind to the encouragem­ent they are offering Russian President Vladimir Putin to commit further mayhem against the United States.

In Ukraine, Putin feels totally free to up the scale of his war crimes against civilians, as the GOP turns against Kyiv while the world and the White House focus on Gaza.

Swarms of Russian drones, many provided by Iran, now hover over major cities such as Kharkiv, deliberate­ly hitting apartment blocks, malls and civilian power stations.

“People are afraid of the double tap,” the Russian tactic of a second attack wave that targets first responders, I was told by phone by Ukrainian photojourn­alist Alex Babenko..

If the aid package passed, Ukraine could acquire more air defenses, along with desperatel­y needed artillery shells for the front lines.

America’s European allies, who collective­ly give Ukraine far more aid than the United States, are struggling to help fill the weapons supply gap.

The Europeans see firsthand how Putin has been enabled by the paralysis of the U.S. Congress. The Russian leader shows no hesitation about assassinat­ing Russian dissidents abroad — in London, in the center of Berlin and, most recently, in a Spanish town. He also is blatantly collecting foreign hostages — including Americans such as Wall Street Journal correspond­ent Evan Gershkovic­h — to trade for jailed Russian spies.

Putin and his Kremlin minions regularly dispense threats about using nuclear weapons while threatenin­g NON-NATO members in Europe and militarizi­ng the Arctic. Putin repeatedly has made clear, in public speeches, that he seeks to rebuild the onetime Russian empire.

Yet, Trump continues to boast that he could negotiate a peace deal between Russia and Ukraine within 24 hours if reelected. He has said privately he would do so by pressuring Ukraine to cede Crimea and the Donbas region in eastern Ukraine, according to a report in The Washington Post.

In other words, the GOP candidate wants to force Ukraine to capitulate to an aggressive dictator who invaded a peaceful neighbor and seeks to turn Ukraine into a Soviet-style satellite. Given Trump’s hostility to Ukraine, Putin appears confident he can pursue his aims fully if the Republican wins.

Meanwhile, in Congress and MAGA world, far-right Republican­s talk as if Ukraine is the enemy, using debunked claims about stolen U.S. funds and Ukrainian corruption that echo Kremlin propaganda.

This is the fetid GOP atmosphere in which Johnson must make his decision: Does he want to do the right thing for American security, or does he want to kowtow to the MAGA mob, whose leader admires Putin?

I must add here that President Joe Biden also faces a momentous choice: If aid resumes, the White House needs to stop foot-dragging on sending Ukraine key weapons systems such as long-range ATACMS missiles, with which Kyiv could expand its amazing progress in taking out Russian ships, military bases and supply depots. But first things first.

In the coming days, the future of the Ukraine war may be decided, either by a show of Johnsonian courage or by Putin’s pals in the GOP.

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