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<https://www.newsmax.com/world/globaltalk/house-israel-aid-ukraine-republicans-biden-gaza/2023/11/02/id/1140784/>
  

House Approves $14.5B in Assistance for Israel; Biden Vows to Veto GOP's 
Approach

LISA MASCARO

6–8 minutes

  _____  

The House approved $14.5 billion in military aid Thursday for Israel, a 
muscular U.S. response to the war with Hamas but also a partisan approach by 
new Speaker Mike Johnson that poses a direct challenge to Democrats and 
President Joe Biden.

In a departure from norms, Johnson's package required that the emergency aid be 
offset with cuts in government spending elsewhere. That tack established the 
new House GOP's conservative leadership, but it also turned what would 
typically be a bipartisan vote into one dividing Democrats and Republicans. 
Biden has said he would veto the bill, which was approved on a largely 
party-line vote.

Johnson, R-La., said the Republican package would provide Israel with the 
assistance needed to defend itself, free hostages held by Hamas and eradicate 
the militant Palestinian group, accomplishing "all of this while we also work 
to ensure responsible spending and reduce the size of the federal government.”

Democrats said that approach would only delay help for Israel. Senate Majority 
Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., has warned that the “stunningly unserious” bill 
has no chances in the Senate.

The first substantial legislative effort in Congress to support Israel in the 
war falls far short of Biden's request for nearly $106 billion that would also 
back Ukraine as it fights Russia, along with U.S. efforts to counter China and 
address security at the border with Mexico.

It is also Johnson's first big test as House speaker as the Republican majority 
tries to get back to work after the month of turmoil since ousting Rep. Kevin 
McCarthy, R-Calif., as speaker. Johnson has said he will turn next to aid for 
Ukraine along with U.S. border security, preferring to address Biden's requests 
separately as GOP lawmakers increasingly oppose aiding Kyiv.

The White House's veto warning said Johnson's approach “fails to meet the 
urgency of the moment” and would set a dangerous precedent by requiring 
emergency funds to come from cuts elsewhere.

While the amount for Israel in the House bill is similar to what Biden sought, 
the White House said the Republican plan's failure to include humanitarian 
assistance for Gaza is a “grave mistake” as the crisis deepens.

Biden on Wednesday called for a pause in the war to allow for relief efforts.

"This bill would break with the normal, bipartisan approach to providing 
emergency national security assistance," the White House wrote in its statement 
of administration policy on the legislation. It said the GOP stance "would have 
devastating implications for our safety and alliances in the years ahead."

It was unclear before voting Thursday how many Democrats would join with 
Republicans. The White House had been directly appealing to lawmakers, 
particularly calling Jewish Democrats, urging them to reject the bill.

White House chief of staff Jeff Zients, counselor to the president Steve 
Ricchetti and other senior White House staff have been engaging House 
Democrats, said a person familiar with the situation and granted anonymity to 
discuss it.

But the vote was difficult for some lawmakers who want to support Israel and 
may have trouble explaining the trade-off to constituents, especially as the 
large AIPAC lobby and other groups encouraged passage.

To pay for the bill, House Republicans have attached provisions that would cut 
billions from the IRS that Democrats approved last year and Biden signed into 
law as a way to go after tax cheats. The nonpartisan Congressional Budget 
Office says doing that would end up costing the federal government a net $12 
billion because of lost revenue from tax collections.

Republicans scoffed at that assessment, but the independent budget office is 
historically seen as a trusted referee.

As the floor debate got underway, Democrats pleaded for Republicans to restore 
the humanitarian aid Biden requested and decried the politicization of 
typically widely bipartisan Israel support.

“Republicans are leveraging the excruciating pain of an international crisis to 
help rich people who cheat on their taxes and big corporations who regularly 
dodge their taxes,” said Rep. Jim McGovern of Massachusetts, the top Democrat 
on the House Rules Committee.

Rep. Dan Goldman of New York described hiding in a stairwell with his wife and 
children while visiting Israel as rockets fired in what he called the most 
horrific attack on Jews since the Holocaust.

Nevertheless, Goldman said he opposed the Republican-led bill as “shameful 
effort” to turn the situation in Israel and the Jewish people into a political 
weapon.

“Support for Israel may be a political game for my colleagues on the other side 
of the aisle," the Democrat said. "But this is personal for us Jews and it is 
existential for the one Jewish nation in the world that is a safe haven from 
the rising tide of antisemitism around the globe.”

The Republicans have been attacking Democrats who raise questions about 
Israel's war tactics as antisemitic. The House tried to censure the only 
Palestinian-American lawmaker in Congress, Rep. Rashida Tlaib, D-Mich., over 
remarks she made. The censure measure failed.

Rep. Andrew Clyde, R-Ga., said he was "so thankful there is no humanitarian 
aid," which he argued could fall into the hands of Hamas.

In the Democratic-controlled Senate, Schumer made clear that the House bill 
would be rejected.

“The Senate will not take up the House GOP's deeply flawed proposal, and 
instead we'll work on our own bipartisan emergency aid package" that includes 
money for Israel and Ukraine, as well as humanitarian assistance for Gaza and 
efforts to confront China.

Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky is balancing the need to 
support his GOP allies in the House, while also fighting to keep the aid 
package more in line with Biden's broader request, believing all the issues are 
linked and demand U.S. attention.

McConnell said the aid for Ukraine was “not charity” but was necessary to 
bolster a Western ally against Russia.

In other action Thursday, the House was scheduled to vote on a Republican-led 
resolution that focused on college campus activism over the Israel-Hamas war. 
The nonbinding resolution would condemn support of Hamas, Hezbollah and 
terrorist organizations at institutions of higher education.

Copyright 2023 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not 
be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission. 




https://www.newsmax.com/world/globaltalk/house-israel-aid-ukraine-republicans-biden-gaza/2023/11/02/id/1140784/

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