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House Works on Ukraine, Israe 04/19 07:00
WASHINGTON (AP) -- House congressional leaders were toiling Thursday on a
delicate, bipartisan push toward weekend votes to approve a $95 billion package
of foreign aid for Ukraine, Israel and Taiwan, as well as several other
national security policies at a critical moment at home and abroad.
Republican House Speaker Mike Johnson this week set in motion a plan to
advance the package, which has been held up since October by GOP lawmakers
resistant to approving more funding for Ukraine's fight against Russia. As the
Republican speaker faced an outright rebellion from his right flank and growing
threats for his ouster, it became clear that House Democrat Leader Hakeem
Jeffries would have to lend help to Johnson every step of the way.
"This is a very important message we are going to send to the world this
week, and I'm anxious to get it done," Johnson said earlier Wednesday
announcing his strategy.
The growing momentum for a bipartisanship dynamic, a rarity in the deeply
divided Congress, brought rare scenes of Republicans and Democrats working
together to assert U.S. standing on the global stage and help American allies.
But it also sent Johnson's House Republican majority into fresh rounds of chaos.
Johnson's Republican leadership team, seizing on the opportunity to outflank
hardline conservatives with Democratic support, raised the idea of quickly
changing the procedural rules to make it harder to oust the speaker from office.
But ultra-conservatives reacted with fury, angrily confronting Johnson on
the House floor in a tense scene on Thursday morning. Several suggested they
would join the effort to oust Johnson if the rule was changed. By the
afternoon, Johnson backed away from the idea.
"We will continue to govern under the existing rules," the speaker said on
the social platform X.
Meanwhile, a rare image of bipartisan statesmanship was on display as the
procedural Rules committee began debate launching the steps needed to push the
foreign aid package forward toward weekend voting.
The Republican chairmen of the powerful Appropriations and Foreign Affairs
committees alongside their top Democratic counterparts spoke in evocative
language, some drawing on World War II history, to make the case for ensuring
the U.S. stand with its allies against aggressors.
Chairman Michael McCaul of the Foreign Affairs Committee cast this as a
"pivotal" time in world history, comparing the current images of people fleeing
the conflict in Europe to the situation in 1939 as Hitler's Germany rose to
power.
"Time is not on our side," he told the panel.
The top Democrat on the Foreign Affairs Committee, Rep. Greg Meeks of New
York, shared McCaul's urgency: "The camera of history is rolling."
Johnson is trying to advance a complex plan to hold individual votes this
weekend on the funds for Ukraine, Israel and allies in the Asia-Pacific, then
stitch the package back together.
The package would also include legislation that allows the U.S. to seize
frozen Russian central bank assets to rebuild Ukraine; impose sanctions on
Iran, Russia, China and criminal organizations that traffic fentanyl; and
potentially ban the video app TikTok if its China-based owner doesn't sell its
stake within a year.
President Joe Biden is emphatically pushing Congress to pass the legislation
to buttress what has been a cornerstone of his foreign policy -- halting
Russian President Vladimir Putin's advance in Europe.
"With the boost from supplemental assistance, Ukrainians are entirely
capable of holding their own through 2024, and puncturing Putin's arrogant view
that time is on his side," CIA Director Bill Burns told an audience at the Bush
Center in Dallas Thursday.
While Johnson is trying to remain close to Trump, and positioning the
national security package as a way to assert U.S. strength in the world in the
mold of Ronald Reagan-era Republicans, that puts the speaker politically at
odds with the anti-interventionists powering the former president's bid to
return to the White House.
"Why isn't Europe giving more money to help Ukraine?" Trump wrote on social
media, but his post did not explicitly oppose the foreign aid package before
Congress.
At the Capitol, the ultraconservative House Freedom Caucus was urging
Republicans to block the package from advancing to a final vote. The group
demanded that sweeping immigration enforcement be added to the bill and derided
it as the "'America Last' foreign wars supplemental package."
Given the high stakes of the moment for Ukraine, Israel and other allies,
and the inability of Johnson to marshal enough Republican support, the speaker
had no other choice but to rely on Democrats if he intends to see the national
security package to passage.
Late Thursday night, the four Democrats on the Rules committee voted for a
procedural move to advance the bill to the House floor, while three
archconservative Republicans voted against it.
Rarely, if ever, does the minority party help the majority through the
procedural hoops, particularly in the House Rules committee or during the
various floor votes before final passage. It represented a level of
bipartisanship unseen in this Congress, even as Republican leaders watched
their own priority bills defeated on procedural votes by their own members.
"This is a moment in history where we need to ensure that at long last we
are bringing this critical aid to Ukraine to the floor," Democratic Whip Rep.
Katherine Clark told reporters earlier Thursday.
Yet Democrats were also trying to apply maximum leverage as Johnson's job
comes under threat.
At a closed door Democratic meeting, Clark advised rank and file lawmakers
not to divulge their positions on whether they would vote to help defeat a
motion to vacate Johnson as speaker, though a handful of Democrats have already
publicly said they would likely do so.
"Do not box yourself in with a public statement," Clark told them according
to a person familiar with the remarks.
Lawmakers say the world is watching and waiting on its next steps, but
there's still a long slog ahead. If the House is able to clear the package this
weekend, it still must go to the Senate for another round of voting.
Sen. Rand Paul, a Republican of Kentucky who is adamantly opposed to the aid
package, said on X that "no one should expect easy or quick passage in the
Senate."
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