The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

House advances long-delayed aid package for Ukraine, Israel

Speaker Johnson fights to keep his job

- By Stephen Groves and Lisa Mascaro

WASHINGTON — House Speaker Mike Johnson, facing a choice between potentiall­y losing his job and advancing aid for Ukraine, forged ahead Wednesday toward a vote later this week on a package of funding that also includes Israel and Taiwan.

After agonizing over how to proceed on the package for days, the Republican speaker texted GOP lawmakers that he will start a days-long push to hold votes on three funding packages for Ukraine, Israel and allies in the Indo-Pacific, as well as a several other foreign policy proposals in a fourth bill.

Johnson said he was proposing that some of the aid for Kyiv be structured as loans, along with greater oversight, but the decision to support Ukraine at all has angered populist conservati­ves in the House and given new energy to a threat to remove him from the speaker’s office.

“By posting text of these bills as soon as they are completed, we will ensure time for a robust amendment process,” Johnson wrote in his message, which was shared by two Republican lawmakers.

The votes on the package are expected Saturday evening, Johnson said. But he faces a treacherou­s path to get there.

The speaker will almost certainly need Democratic support on the procedural maneuvers to advance his complex plan of holding separate votes on each of the aid packages.

It was not clear whether Democrats would assist Johnson. They were still awaiting the details of the legislatio­n and have become increasing­ly impatient with his deliberati­ons.

Democrats have demanded that the foreign aid bill hew closely to a $95 billion foreign aid package that the Senate passed in February. That legislatio­n would fund the U.S. allies, as well as provide humanitari­an aid for civilians in Gaza and Ukraine.

Meanwhile, the threat to oust Johnson from Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, a Republican of Georgia, gained support this week. One other Republican, Rep. Thomas Massie of Kentucky, said he was joining Greene and called for Johnson to resign. Other GOP lawmakers have openly complained about Johnson’s leadership.

“You are seriously out of step with Republican­s by continuing to pass bills dependent on Democrats,” Greene wrote on the social platform X. “Everyone sees through this.”

In an effort to satisfy conservati­ves, Johnson said he would hold a separate vote on a border security package that contains most of a bill that was already passed by House Republican­s last year. That bill has already been rejected by the Democratic­controlled Senate, and conservati­ves quickly denounced the plan to hold a separate vote on it as insufficie­nt. Rep. Chip Roy of Texas called the strategy a “complete failure.”

The ultraconse­rvative House Freedom Caucus posted on X that Johnson had was “surrenderi­ng the last opportunit­y we have to combat the border crisis.”

As part of the foreign aid push, Johnson also said House members would have an opportunit­y to vote on a raft of foreign policy proposals, including allowing the U.S. to seize frozen Russian central bank assets, placing sanctions on Iran, Russia and China, and potentiall­y banning the video app TikTok if its Chinabased owner doesn’t sell its stake.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States