From the BBC:
“Senate's $95bn for Ukraine,
Israel and Taiwan faces uphill battle in House”
The US Senate has approved a
$95bn (£75.2bn) aid package for Ukraine, Israel and Taiwan after months of
political wrangling. While Democrats were in favour of passing the bill,
Republicans were divided and previously voted it down. The package includes
$60bn for Kyiv, $14bn for Israel's war against Hamas and $10bn for humanitarian
aid in conflict zones, including in Gaza. The bill will now go to the House,
where its fate is uncertain. The package, which also includes more than $4bn in
funds for Indo-Pacific allies, passed the Senate despite criticism from
Republican House Speaker Mike Johnson and former President Donald Trump. Lawmakers
voted 70 to 29 to approve the package. Twenty-two Republicans, including Senate
Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, joined most Democrats to vote for the
legislation. "History settles every account," Mr McConnell, a
Kentucky senator, said in a statement following the vote. "And today, on
the value of American leadership and strength, history will record that the
Senate did not blink."
Ukraine's leader said he was
"grateful" to senators. "For us in Ukraine, continued US
assistance helps to save human lives from Russian terror. It means that life
will continue in our cities and will triumph over war," President
Volodymyr Zelensky wrote in a post on X, formerly Twitter The vote came after
an all-night Senate session during which several Republican opponents made
speeches in a bid to slow down the process. "Shouldn't we try to fix our
own country first?" Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky said on Monday. Some
left-wing lawmakers, including Democrat Jeff Merkley of Oregon and independent
Bernie Sanders of Vermont, also voted against the bill, citing concerns about
supporting Israel's bombing of Gaza. The aid package is a stripped-down version
of a $118bn package that Senate Republicans voted down last week.
Republicans had initially
demanded that any foreign aid be tied to more security measures at the southern
border. But after Mr Trump came out against the border provisions, Republicans
were divided on the package. Some lawmakers suggested border measures could be
added back into the current version of the legislation. Mr Johnson suggested in
a statement on Monday night the new bill would not pass the
Republican-controlled House of Representatives without such provisions. "House
Republicans were crystal clear from the very beginning of discussions that any
so-called national security supplemental legislation must recognise that
national security begins at our own border," he said. The Louisiana
congressman said lawmakers "should have gone back to the drawing
board" with the legislation to focus on border security.
With Senate passage of the aid
bill stripped of immigration measures, Mr Johnson and the House Republican
leadership will have to decide whether to bring the package to a vote in that
chamber, attempt to amend it and send it back to the Senate, or to ignore it
entirely.
That last option could prompt
those House Republicans who support Ukraine military assistance to join
Democrats in filing a discharge petition. This is a rare parliamentary
procedure that would circumvent Mr Johnson and force a vote. Some on the left
may baulk at the military aid for Israel in the package, however, making such a
manoeuvre - which requires the support of a majority of the House - more
difficult. After the Senate vote, Mr Johnson said his chamber "will have
to continue to work its own will on these important matters". He could
divide the different pieces of aid into separate components, or add
conservative US immigration reforms. Mr Johnson will be hard-pressed to
convince his narrow House majority, which is sharply divided on aid to Ukraine,
to follow his lead, however.
Democratic Senate Majority Leader
Chuck Schumer, meanwhile, hailed the passage of the bill on Tuesday. He said
the Senate was "telling Putin he will regret the day he questioned
America's resolve". President Joe Biden applauded the measure, too, saying
it would allow the US "to stand up for Ukraine's freedom and support its
ability to defend itself against Russia's aggression". The US is one of
the largest providers of aid to Ukraine. The White House asked Congress months
ago to pass a bill that included foreign aid. This could be Congress's last
shot at passing Ukraine aid for the foreseeable future, and Ukraine has warned
it may not be able to successfully defend itself against Russia without
Washington's backing.
^ I don't think this will pass
the House because even though the Republicans there were going to get exactly
what they asked for in a previous Border Bill they are mere puppets of someone
else who doesn't care about the US Border, but only about the Presidential
Election this November.
That means that Ukraine will
continue to suffer, Israel will continue to suffer and the US Border States
will continue to suffer. ^
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