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US House approves Ukraine aid bill

Lawmakers have authorized about $61 billion in additional spending to support Kiev in the conflict with RussiaUS House approves Ukraine aid bill

US House approves Ukraine aid bill

FILE PHOTO: US Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi and Vice President Kamala Harris hold a Ukrainian flag signed by members of the that country’s military given to them by President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelensky as he addresses a joint meeting of Congress in the House Chamber of the US Capitol. ©  Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images

US lawmakers have broken a logjam on providing more weapons and money to Ukraine by passing an emergency spending bill that had been stalled since last fall on concern that Washington was merely prolonging the conflict with Russia without offering a strategy for victory or a peace settlement.

The bill passed by a margin of 311-112 on Saturday in the US House of Representatives, with all Democrats and 101 Republicans voting in favor of providing $61 billion in new aid to Ukraine. It’s expected to be combined with aid bills for Israel and Indo-Pacific allies before being quickly approved by the Senate and signed by President Joe Biden.

Members of Congress cheered and waved Ukrainian flags as the votes were being counted, prompting an admonishment by House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-Louisiana) to abide by the rules of decorum. Johnson had blocked the legislation from going to a vote since last fall, given that most members of his party opposed prolonging the Ukraine conflict. Republicans voted against more Ukraine spending on Saturday by a 112-101 margin. 

Asked on Thursday why he had dropped his opposition to the bill, putting himself at risk of being ousted as House speaker, Johnson told reporters, “History judges us for what we do. This is a critical time right now – a critical time on the world stage.” He tried to blunt opposition by labeling some of the Ukraine aid as loans. 

Biden’s administration ran out of Ukraine funding earlier this year, after burning through $113 billion in previously approved aid packages. With weapons shipments from its biggest benefactor disrupted, Kiev has suffered ammunition shortages in recent months. Biden has blamed Republican lawmakers for battlefield defeats — including the fall of Avdeevka, a key Ukrainian stronghold, in February – saying “congressional inaction” led to “notable gains” by Russian forces. 

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The House also voted on Saturday to approve separate bills providing $26 billion in aid to Israel and $8 billion for Taiwan and other Indo-Pacific region allies. In addition, the emergency spending package includes $9 billion in humanitarian aid for civilians in Gaza and other war zones.  

The Ukraine, Israel and Indo-Pacific bills will be combined into a $95 billion emergency spending package to enable quick passage by the Senate and final approval by Biden. 

Johnson relied on unanimous support from Democrats in the House to push through more Ukraine funding. Representative Al Green (D-Texas) told reporters that lawmakers were coming together in a bipartisan way to overcome “pro-Putin obstructionists,” suggesting that only agents of Russian President Vladimir Putin oppose funding the Ukraine conflict. 

Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Georgia), who has called for Johnson to be replaced as speaker, called Saturday’s vote “despicable.” She added, “We should be demanding peace, not funding the military industrial complex’s blood-money wars, fueled by dead bodies in Ukraine.”

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