According to Fred Lucas at The Daily Signal, President Joe Biden and Democrat Senators – along with help from some Republicans – are attempting to pass a bill to continue funding the war in Ukraine. Senator JD Vance (R-Ohio) argued on X that the bill is “a predicate to impeach Donald Trump should he win a second term.” Senators Mike Lee (R-Utah), Senator Ron Johnson (R-Wis.), and others joined in the discussion.
Lucas
reported that 18 Republicans joined the Democrat majority to close the bill to
debate and to move to a vote. The bill is for $95 billion dollars with $61
billion going to Ukraine and $14 going to Israel to eradicate Hamas after its
October 7, 2023, terrorist attacks.
“There is actually a very good argument that
the exact same legal justification for the impeachment of 2019 would hold with
this legislation,” Vance said of Trump’s impeachment by a Democrat-run House
over his phone call to Ukraine’s president.
Vance referenced a recent Washington Post
story that said: “Not incidentally, a U.S. official said, the hope is that the
long-term promise – again assuming congressional buy-in – will also ‘future-proof’
aid for Ukraine against the possibility that former President Donald Trump wins
his reelection bid.”
“The funding for Ukraine doesn’t just
extend into 2024, it extends into 2025 and arguably even 2026,” Vance said of
the bill. “By the admission of administration officials, it would explicitly
tie the hands of the next president of the United States and force that
president to continue funneling weapons and resources for Ukraine instead of
negotiating a settlement.” …
As president, Biden supports continued
funding for Ukraine – arguing that Russia must be prevented from further
aggression. By contrast, Trump has said that if elected, he would negotiate a
peaceful resolution between Ukraine and Russia.
“He will have a diplomatic agenda that
would be directly thwarted by this legislation,” Vance said of Trump. “If he
didn’t send the money to Ukraine – as is currently required by this legislation
– it would establish a predicate that is exactly the same as the predicate in
the 2019 articles of impeachment.”
“Other
senators made other arguments about sending U.S. aid to Ukraine with little
accountability. Senator Lee said, “The fact that we would do this without
putting an inspector general in place specifically for this and adopting all
sorts of other transparency, auditability provisions turns a blind eye to
corruption,” Lee said.
Lee
argued against funding Ukraine because they use the U.S. aid -- $8 billion – “to pay their civil servants,
their bureaucracy, and you don’t put any restrictions on their ability to use
it for salaries, or to use it for backing up the Ukrainian welfare system, or
to sue it for handouts to favored companies like clothing stores and sellers of
concert tickets, you know that it’s going to continue.”
Senator
Johnson’s argument was that the Biden administration has no clear strategy for
the war in Ukraine besides funding the war for Ukraine. “One of the depraved
justifications for all the spending is that it’s really not going over to
Ukraine, it’s helping to build our industrial base, an so it’s creating jobs in
your state.”
No comments:
Post a Comment