"In an interview, the House minority
leader, who is in line to be speaker should Republicans win a majority, said
his party would resist giving a “blank check” to the corruption-torn country.
WASHINGTON — Representative Kevin
McCarthy of California, the top House Republican, said that if his party wins a
majority in next month’s midterm elections, its members would be unwilling to
“write a blank check” to Ukraine, suggesting it could be more difficult for
President Biden to get congressional approval for large infusions of aid to
bolster the country.
“I think people are going to be sitting in a crisis, and
they’re not going to write a blank check to Ukraine,” he said in a recent interview with Punchbowl News.
“Ukraine is important, but at the
same time, it can’t be the only thing they do, and it can’t be a blank check.”
Mr. McCarthy’s comments reflected
the rising tide of isolationism in the Republican Party, especially in the
House, where an increasing number of libertarian-minded conservatives who have
adopted former President Donald J. Trump’s “America First” position have
vocally opposed authorizing billions of dollars in military and humanitarian
aid to Ukraine.
That impulse led 57 House Republicans to vote in May against a
$40 billion aid package for Ukraine. In the Senate, 11 Republican senators opposed the aid
package after Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the minority
leader, forcefully marshaled support for
the legislation in his conference.
In total, Congress has approved more
than $60 billion to Ukraine this year alone by overwhelming margins, the largest amount of military aid
the United States has committed to any country in a single year in nearly half
a century, since the Vietnam War.
Mr. McCarthy, who is in line to be
speaker if his party wins control of the House, voted for the aid package in May, as did his top
two deputies. His remarks on Tuesday casting doubt on his party’s appetite to
send more aid underscored the precarious balance he is attempting as he tries
to straddle the rift among Republicans between the traditional, hawkish
conservatives and the harder-right, more anti-interventionist members whose
support he needs to be elected speaker.
The House Republicans who are poised
to run the committees with oversight of the war should they win the majority
are largely hawks who have backed the aid to Ukraine, indicating that some in
the party may be reluctant to turn their backs on Kyiv. And many Democrats have
supported the money for Ukraine, suggesting that even if most Republicans were
opposed, the House could still muster bipartisan support to approve such aid.
Representative Michael McCaul of
Texas, the top Republican on the Foreign Affairs Committee, told Bloomberg News on
Tuesday in response to Mr. McCarthy’s remarks that there was still “broad
bipartisan support” for aiding Ukraine.
“We want to ensure that our NATO
partners are stepping up to the plate and bearing the burden of the cost,” Mr.
McCaul said, adding of Mr. McCarthy, “I think he’s just saying we’re not going
to write a blank check without oversight and accountability, which my committee
will be providing.”"
Most Republicans won't give McCaul that committee. The crisis, the crisis...
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