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US House Speaker: “Israel’s” Needs More “urgent” than Ukraine’s

US House Speaker: “Israel’s” Needs More “urgent” than Ukraine’s
folder_openAmericas... access_timeone year ago
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 By Staff, Agencies

President Joe Biden’s latest request for funding Ukraine aid will be put on the backburner as US lawmakers vote this week on the more “pressing” priority of helping to defend the apartheid “Israeli” entity in its aggression on Gaza, newly elected House Speaker Mike Johnson has divulged.

“We’re going to move a stand-alone ‘Israel’ funding bill this week in the House,” Johnson said on Sunday in a Fox News interview. “I know our colleagues, our Republican colleagues in the Senate, have a similar measure.” He gave no indication of when the House might take up the latest proposed round of funding for Ukraine.

Biden has called for bundling aid to both Ukraine and the “Israeli” entity into a $106 billion emergency funding bill, rather than allowing lawmakers to vote on the issues separately. His administration unveiled a plan earlier this month to provide an additional $61.4 billion to fund Ukraine’s conflict with Russia, $14.3 billion for “Israel”, and $9.2 billion for humanitarian aid in both countries.

Congress previously approved $113 billion in Ukraine aid in four rounds of legislation, but Republican opposition to further funding to Kiev has increased. Most House lawmakers in the majority party now oppose sending more aid to Ukraine, and strife over the issue among Republicans contributed to the ouster earlier this month of Johnson’s predecessor as House speaker, Kevin McCarthy.

Johnson predicted that the stand-alone “Israel” bill will win strong bipartisan support in both the House and the Senate. “My intention is not to use this for any partisan political gamesmanship,” he said. “This is a very serious matter.”

The new speaker, who has been a skeptic on aid to Kiev, argued in a Fox interview aired on Thursday that the Biden administration hasn’t provided a roadmap for what it expects to achieve with massive aid to Ukraine and how it plans to end the conflict. On the other hand, he has no such reservations about backing the “Israeli” entity.

“We believe that that is a pressing and urgent need,” Johnson said in Sunday’s interview. “There are lots of things going on around the world that we have to address, and we will, but right now, what’s happening in ‘Israel’ takes the immediate attention, and I think we have got to separate that and get it through.”

Johnson, who spoke on Saturday at the Republican Jewish Coalition summit in Las Vegas, said he heard “firsthand reports” regarding to what was happening to “Israelis”. “This is a priority for our country…,” he said. “We’re going to stand with our friends”.

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