House lawmakers to offer their own Ukraine and border bill

9 months ago

House Republicans are planning to unveil a Ukraine, Israel, Taiwan and border bill as an alternative to the border-free package that passed the Senate on Tuesday, a lawmaker leading the effort said Wednesday.

Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick (R-Pa.) told reporters the proposed pathway could be revealed as early as Thursday — and that he will brief Speaker Mike Johnson on its contents prior to its release. He said he is working with “a handful” of colleagues from both parties in the Senate and House, but declined to name names or give details of the proposal.

“Stay tuned in the next 24 hours, I think you'll see something that I think will be bipartisan,” he said, adding he wasn’t sure if it would be a formal proposal from the bipartisan Problem Solvers Caucus. He co-chairs the group with Rep. Josh Gottheimer (D-N.J.).

Fitzpatrick said Johnson claimed during Wednesday morning’s House GOP conference meeting that President Joe Biden would not meet with him on border security measures, reiterating comments made by Majority Leader Steve Scalise during a Tuesday interview with CNN.

“We were just told that the president will not sit down with him,” said the Pennsylvania centrist, who also co-chairs the Congressional Ukraine Caucus. “So it's kind of hard to negotiate when the president won’t sit down with him.”

The White House did not immediately respond to the allegation that Biden will not meet with Johnson.



The Senate on Tuesday cleared a $95 billion international assistance bill that includes aid to Ukraine, Israel and Taiwan. An initial draft included border security funding and bipartisan border policy provisions, but Democrats dropped those measures after nearly all Senate Republicans blocked the bill.

Johnson has vowed the Senate version of the package won’t see a vote in the House. He faulted the Senate for not approving tough border restrictions, even though Senate Republicans blocked the border deal and harsh measures endorsed by House GOP leaders stand little chance of becoming law. Instead, Johnson said the House “will work its own will.”

"They're just looking for ways to be able to scratch some of those itches and we don't know what that is," said Rep. Steve Womack (R-Ark.). "So, if there is a viable path, then leadership will pursue it. But that's gonna be on them."

Asked if the alternative proposal would contain humanitarian aid to Gaza, Fitzpatrick said “not likely in this one.” Limiting the scope of aid would reflect GOP arguments that the U.S. should only be funding the weapons needed for Ukraine to defeat Russia.

House Democrats, meanwhile, have floated using a discharge petition to bypass Johnson and force consideration of the measure on the House floor. House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries hasn’t ruled out the push, though it is seldom successful and would require numerous Republicans to publicly defy party leadership.

“House Republicans need to put the bipartisan comprehensive national security bill on the House floor today, tomorrow, before the end of the week,” Jeffries told reporters on Wednesday. “We support an up-or-down vote.”

Fitzpatrick would not rule out signing onto a discharge petition, saying “we will do what it takes to get a vote.” However, rank-and-file Republicans, even those who are generally supportive of aid to Ukraine, indicated they’re still skeptical of the long-shot procedural maneuver.

“No, no, no, no,” said Rep. Joe Wilson (R-S.C.), a senior member of the House Armed Services Committee.

Johnson is under pressure from his right flank to reject further Ukraine aid and pass strict border security and immigration measures.



Several members of the conservative House Freedom Caucus argued any legislation should prioritize border security and contain offsets for foreign aid. Some Republicans also contend aid should be limited to Israel. House Republicans have twice voted on Israel-only aid bills while ignoring Biden’s requests for Ukraine and the Pacific.

“The sentiment among people I talk to is they want to see a clean Israel bill go back with a pay-for and we need to do something on the border,” said Rep. Andy Biggs (R-Ariz.). “My echo chamber [on Ukraine aid] is I don’t want to say ‘ignore,’ but they don’t support it.”

Rep. Mike Lawler (R-N.Y.) said he supports the aid in the Senate package, broadly speaking, but argued the House should not accept it as-is.

“They finally got something through, but it's not just a function of ‘the House accepts what the Senate does,’” he said. “You negotiate, and that's my objective, to get support for Israel, for Ukraine.”

Questions are swirling over how much time Ukraine has in its war to repel Russia’s invasion, as it exhausts Western-supplied weapons. The House is due to go into recess at the end of the week, and will likely be consumed with overdue annual spending bills when it returns.

Rep. Dan Crenshaw (R-Texas) said the House could feasibly take a month to craft its own foreign aid bill.

“It’s a much longer complicated conversation about who's where on the battlefield, but Ukraine's not falling in the next month,” he said. “So we need to get this right.”

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