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WASHINGTON (AP) — House Republicans went after the IRS — long a GOP whipping child — when they decided that emergency aid for Israel should be coupled with cuts elsewhere in the budget. The aid bill that passed the House on Thursday — unlikely to be approved by the Democratic-controlled Senate — would cut $14 billion from the nation's tax collector in exchange for providing assistance to Israel. President Joe Biden has said he would veto the bill if it reaches his desk. The IRS cutback would cost taxpayers billions of dollars, not save money, according to independent budget analysts. In June, legislation to raise the statutory debt limit also rescinded $1.4 billion given to the federal tax collector through the IRA.
Persons: , Joe Biden, , Danny Werfel, Werfel, MacGuineas Organizations: WASHINGTON, , Republicans, IRS, Democratic, Congressional, Treasury, Federal Budget Locations: Israel
In response, they adopted a tragic sensibility. You can try to avoid thinking about the dark realities of life and naïvely wish that bad things won’t happen. Or you can confront these realities and develop a tragic mentality to help you thrive among them. This tragic sensibility prepares you for the rigors of life in concrete ways. Third, this tragic mentality encourages caution.
Persons: Ralph Waldo Emerson, Hal Brands, Charles Edel, Thucydides, Matt Gaetz Organizations: Hamas, Republicans
Hunter Biden, son of US President Joe Biden, arrives at Fort Lesley J. McNair in Washington, DC, on Tuesday, July 4, 2023. Hunter Biden, son of President Joe Biden, on Thursday denounced congressional Republicans and right-wing media figures for using his well-known history of drug abuse to attack his father and launch "fruitless" investigations. "My struggles and my mistakes have been fodder for a vile and sustained disinformation campaign against him, and an all-out annihilation of my reputation through high-pitched but fruitless congressional investigations," the younger Biden wrote. The charges stem from him "possessing an unloaded gun for 11 days five years ago," Biden wrote, adding they "appear to be the first-ever of their kind brought in the history of Delaware." Biden pleaded not guilty last month to a three-count indictment in the case in a U.S. District Court in Wilmington, Delaware.
Persons: Hunter Biden, Joe Biden, Lesley J, McNair, Biden, Hunter Organizations: Republicans, USA Today, Republican Locations: Washington ,, USA, Delaware, U.S, Wilmington , Delaware
Joe Biden and his brother James in 2008 at the Democratic National Convention in Denver. Photo: Rick Friedman/Corbis/Getty ImagesWASHINGTON—House Republicans leading an impeachment inquiry into President Biden are scrutinizing payments between him and his brother as part of a broader probe into the Biden family businesses and whether the president has personally benefited from them. The Republican staff of the House Oversight and Accountability Committee subpoenaed financial records that show in two cases—between his tenures as vice president and president—Joe Biden received funds directly from his brother James. The president and his allies say they represent the repayment of loans Joe Biden made to help out his brother. Financial records also indicate the checks represent a loan repayment.
Persons: Joe Biden, James, Rick Friedman, Biden, — Joe Biden Organizations: Democratic National Convention, Getty, WASHINGTON —, Republicans, Republican Locations: Denver
The Fed continued its pause on interest rate hikes in November. Fed Chair Powell said interest rate cuts are not part of the discussion right now. AdvertisementAdvertisementThe Federal Reserve doesn't want Americans thinking an interest rate cut is coming anytime soon. On Wednesday, the nation's central bank announced it would be continuing its pause on interest rates hikes in November, following the pause in September. Democratic Rep. Brendan Boyle, ranking member of the House Budget Committee, said in a statement that "the Fed is right to continue the pause in interest rate hikes" but also "must avoid a costly overcorrection that could threaten this progress."
Persons: Powell, , Jerome Powell, Brendan Boyle Organizations: Fed, Service, Federal, Democratic, Republicans Locations: Israel, Ukraine
Marjorie Taylor Greene tried to censure Rashida Tlaib for "leading an insurrection." Several Republicans joined Democrats to table Greene's resolution. AdvertisementAdvertisementRep. Marjorie Taylor Greene's attempt to censure Rep. Rashida Tlaib has failed — in major part thanks to her home-state Republican colleagues. On Wednesday, a majority of the Republican-led House voted to table the Georgia Republican's censure resolution, which accused the Michigan Democrat of being antisemitic, sympathizing with terrorists, and "leading an insurrection." Here are the 23 Republicans who voted to table Greene's resolution:
Persons: Marjorie Taylor Greene, Rashida Tlaib, Tlaib, , Marjorie Taylor Greene's, Greene, Peace — Organizations: Palestine, Republicans, Democrats, Service, Republican, Michigan Democrat, Palestinian, American, Capitol, Jewish, Peace, Cannon, Michigan Republicans Locations: Georgia, Michigan, Israel
Republicans proposed giving Israel $14 billion, attached to $14 billion in IRS funding cuts. NEW LOOK Sign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. AdvertisementAdvertisementRepublicans want to give Israel $14.3 billion — but only if they can cut the same amount from the IRS. It's insulting that the hard right is openly trying to exploit the crisis in Israel to try and reward the ultra-rich." "Bifurcating Israel security assistance from the other priorities in the national security supplemental will have global consequences."
Persons: , Mike Johnson's, Joe Biden, Johnson, Ashley Schapitl, Daniel Werfel, Kevin McCarthy, Schapitl, Chuck Schumer Organizations: Israel, Office, Senate Democrats, White, Service, IRS, Palestinian, Hamas, Democrats, Internal Revenue, Republicans, Washington Post, GOP, Senate, White House, Management, OMB Locations: Israel
Mike Johnson is the first person to become speaker of the House who can be fairly described as a Christian nationalist, a major development in America history in and of itself. Equally important, however, his ascension reflects the strength of white evangelical voters in the House Republican caucus, voters who are determined to use the power of government to roll back the civil rights, women’s rights and sexual revolutions. “If anything, it shows us that white evangelicals still have a very strong hold on the modern Republican Party. In the 1970s, mainline Protestants dominated at 46 percent, compared with evangelical Protestants at 24 percent and Catholics at 19 percent. By the decade of the 2010s, evangelical Protestants were a commanding 38 percent of Republicans, mainline Protestants had fallen to 17 percent and Catholics had grown to 25 percent.
Persons: Mike Johnson, “ Johnson, ” Ryan Burge, , ” Burge Organizations: Republican, Eastern Illinois University, American Baptist Church, Republican Party Locations: America, United States
But then he imposed a condition on the Israel money: Mr. Biden must agree to cut the same amount out of the money the Internal Revenue Service uses to chase down high-income tax cheats. Earlier this year, Republicans forced Mr. Biden to cut $20 billion from the I.R.S. cut isn’t really going to happen, as House Republicans know, because Mr. Johnson’s bill will die in the Senate, where many leading Republicans already oppose it. cut, he gets to show the same extremists who deposed his predecessor that he can play rough with the White House. If Mr. Johnson has substantive objections to helping Ukraine and Israel that justify the legislative impediments he is constructing, he should state what they are.
Persons: Mike Johnson, Johnson’s, he’s, Biden, Mr, Mitch McConnell, Lindsey Graham of, ” Mr, Graham, , Mitt Romney, Joe Wilson of, He’s, Ritchie Torres, Axios, Johnson, Thomas Friedman Organizations: Republican House, Internal Revenue Service, Israel, Republican, Republicans, Treasury, Congressional Budget, National Bureau of Economic Research, Senate, Ukraine, Hamas, White, Democrats, Democrat, West Bank, Palestinian Authority Locations: Ukraine, Israel, Taiwan, U.S, Nottingham, Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, Moscow, Utah, Joe Wilson of South Carolina, New York, Gaza, West
Polls show US support for Ukraine military aid has been declining across political parties. A government shutdown also looms as Biden asks Congress for billions in aid to Israel and Ukraine. By early October, polls showed that support for arming Ukraine had declined amongst Americans of both political parties, a troubling sign for Kyiv. AdvertisementAdvertisementHowever, in the past, he voted with a minority of House Republicans against additional aid. The Republicans for Ukraine advocacy group has given him an "F" grade on support for Ukraine.
Persons: , Nora Bensahel, Bensahel, Joe Biden, Mike Johnson, I'd, Johnson, Kevin McCarthy's, he's, Simon Miles, Trump, Miles Organizations: Biden, Service, Kyiv, Ukraine, Hamas, Johns Hopkins School, International Studies, House, Republican, Republicans, House Republicans, Lawmakers, Duke University's Sanford School of Public, Soviet Union Locations: Ukraine, Israel, Russia, Ukrainian, Gaza, The Israel, Washington , DC, Soviet
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. House of Representatives Speaker Mike Johnson said on Wednesday he still plans to hold a vote on a standalone Israel aid bill despite a Congressional Budget Office score showing it could increase the federal deficit by cutting funding to the Internal Revenue Service. In the first major legislative action under new Speaker Mike Johnson, House Republicans unveiled a standalone supplemental spending bill that would provide $14.3 billion for Israel by cutting Internal Revenue Service funding. The measure is strongly opposed by Democrats, as well as some Republicans. The top Senate Democrat, Chuck Schumer, said on Tuesday the bill would be dead on arrival in the upper chamber. (Reporting by David Morgan; Writing by Katharine Jackson; Editing by Scott Malone)
Persons: Mike Johnson, Chuck Schumer, David Morgan, Katharine Jackson, Scott Malone Organizations: WASHINGTON, . House, Internal Revenue Service, House Republicans, Revenue Service, Democrats, Democrat Locations: Israel
US House blocks rebuke of Tlaib over Israeli-Palestinian rally
  + stars: | 2023-11-01 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +4 min
Republican Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene introduced the resolution on Oct. 26, accusing Tlaib of "antisemitic activity, sympathizing with terrorist organizations, and leading an insurrection at the U.S. Capitol Complex." Greene's resolution refers to a peaceful demonstration in a House office building, during which hundreds of protesters were arrested. The corruption charges against Santos also include reporting a false $500,000 campaign loan and lying to the House about his assets. The former treasurer for Santos' campaign pleaded guilty on Oct. 5 to a conspiracy charge for inflating fundraising numbers. "Mr. Santos is a stain on this institution and not fit to serve his constituents in the House of Representatives," Anthony D'Esposito, one of the House Republican lawmakers behind the resolution, said on the House floor.
Persons: Rashida Tlaib, Sam Bankman, Sarah, Marjorie Taylor Greene, Tlaib, Greene, George Santos, Santos, New York, Kevin McCarthy, Mike Johnson, McCarthy, Mr, Anthony D'Esposito, Makini Brice, Scott Malone, Jonathan Oatis, Lisa Shumaker, Diane Craft Organizations: U.S, . House Financial, Capitol, REUTERS, U.S . House, Representatives, Democratic, Republican, U.S . Capitol, Republicans, White, Thomson Locations: Washington , U.S, WASHINGTON, COVID, Nazi Germany, York, New York City, Santos, New
Rep. Ken Buck, R-Colo., talks with reporters before a procedural vote on the debt limit bill in the U.S. Capitol on Wednesday, May 31, 2023. Republican Rep. Ken Buck of Colorado on Wednesday announced he will not seek reelection next year, saying he was "disappointed" in his party, and disillusioned by political gridlock in Congress. Buck's announcement came just hours after another veteran House Republican, Rep. Kay Granger of Texas, the powerful chair of the House Appropriations Committee, confirmed she would not seek reelection next year either. Buck, 64, said he was leaving Congress in large part because he was frustrated with the direction he saw the Republican Party moving in. "Too many Republican leaders are lying to America," he said in a video announcing his retirement.
Persons: Ken Buck, Ken Buck of Colorado, gridlock, Kay Granger, Granger Organizations: U.S, Capitol, Republican, Wednesday, Republicans, Republican Party Locations: Ken Buck of, Congress, Kay Granger of Texas, Fort Worth, Buck, America
The House is expected to vote Wednesday evening on a resolution to expel Rep. George Santos from the chamber in a rare move that could narrow the GOP’s thin majority. Santos has been embroiled in scandal since he took office and admitted to fabricating elements of his resume. House Republicans have been split on how to proceed. Just five lawmakers have ever been removed from the House by an expulsion vote, and three of them fought against the union in the Civil War. Earlier this year, under former Speaker Kevin McCarthy, House Republicans were able to skirt a Santos expulsion effort brought by Democrats after Santos was first indicted by federal prosecutors by referring the resolution to the House Ethics Committee.
Persons: George Santos, Santos, he’s, hasn’t, , Mike Johnson, Santos ’, , Kevin McCarthy, McCarthy Organizations: New, House Republicans, New York Republicans, Congress, Democrats Locations: York, New
Newly elected Speaker of the House Mike Johnson (R-LA) takes his oath of office after he was elected to be the new Speaker at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, U.S., October 25, 2023. "This will be a litmus test," said Representative Ryan Zinke, a Republican who sits on the House committee that sets spending priorities. With a similar use of previously allocated money, House Republicans would spend a net $65.2 billion on transportation, housing and urban development, 25% below current levels. Even if passed, the House Republican bills have no chance of succeeding in the Democratic-led Senate or being signed into law by Democratic President Joe Biden. While the House has focused on passing spending bills with only Republican votes, the Senate has worked on measures that have bipartisan support.
Persons: Mike Johnson, Elizabth Frantz, Republican Mike Johnson, Johnson's, Don Bacon, Johnson, Israel, Chuck Schumer, Schumer, Ryan Zinke, Kevin McCarthy, Kelly Armstrong of, Joe Biden, Bob Good, Bacon, David Morgan, Scott Malone, Alistair Bell Organizations: U.S, Capitol, REUTERS, Rights, Republican, U.S . House, Department of, Hamas, Ukraine, Internal Revenue Service, Social Security, Democratic, Republicans, Environmental Protection Agency, Senate, Thomson Locations: Washington , U.S, Louisiana, Nebraska, Israel, Kelly Armstrong of South Dakota, Virginia
REUTERS/Nathan Howard/File Photo Acquire Licensing RightsWASHINGTON, Nov 1 (Reuters) - U.S. House of Representatives Speaker Mike Johnson said on Wednesday he plans to hold a vote on a standalone Israel aid bill despite a Congressional Budget Office report showing it could increase the federal deficit. In the first major legislative action under Johnson, House Republicans unveiled their bill on Monday seeking to provide $14.3 billion for Israel by cutting Internal Revenue Service (IRS) funding. The House could vote on the bill and pass it with Republican support as soon as Thursday. The non-partisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO) said on Wednesday that the IRS cuts and the Israel aid in the standalone bill would add nearly $30 billion to the U.S. budget deficit, currently estimated at $1.7 trillion. To become law, any legislation must pass the House, the Senate and be signed into law by Biden.
Persons: Mike Johnson, Nathan Howard, Johnson, Joe Biden's, Josh Hawley, " Johnson, Biden, Johnson's, Chuck Schumer, David Morgan, Patricia Zengerle, Dan Whitcomb, Katharine Jackson, Scott Malone, Rod Nickel Organizations: U.S, Capitol, REUTERS, Rights, . House, House Republicans, Revenue Service, Democratic, White, Israel, Kyiv, Fox News, Office, CBO, Senate, Democrat, Thomson Locations: Washington , U.S, Israel, China, Ukraine, Iran, Gaza, East
More on the Stifled Hunter Biden Probe
  + stars: | 2023-10-31 | by ( The Editorial Board | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: +1 min
Review and Outlook: Attorney General Merrick Garland demonstrates why appointing a special counsel to investigate Hunter Biden was a bad idea. Images: Reuters/Zuma Press Composite: Mark KellyHouse Republicans continue to unpack the Justice Department’s botched Hunter Biden probe, and evidence is mounting of interference from the top. The latest testimony comes from an Oct. 23 Judiciary Committee interview with former U.S. Attorney Scott Brady . In January 2020, then Attorney General Bill Barr tapped Mr. Brady to vet information related to Ukrainian corruption, and to pass along credible material to offices with ongoing investigations. Mr. Brady says in the transcript we’ve reviewed that FBI headquarters and Mr. Weiss’s office made this very difficult.
Persons: General Merrick Garland, Hunter Biden, Mark Kelly, Department’s, Scott Brady, Bill Barr, Brady, David Weiss Organizations: Zuma, Republicans, U.S, Delaware U.S Locations: Delaware, Ukrainian
Big government will drive the next market cycle
  + stars: | 2023-10-31 | by ( Francesco Guerrera | ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +8 min
Growth picked up while quiescent inflation permitted interest rates to fall. Bereft of government support, central banks tried to stimulate their economies by pushing interest rates to new lows. That means interest rates will struggle to return to the ultra-low levels seen after 2008. The first takeaway is that higher debt levels, inflation and interest rates should be bad for bonds. Vincent Deluard of StoneX has proposed a division between intangible and tangible companies.
Persons: Kevin Lamarque, ” Ronald Reagan’s, Milton Friedman –, Britain’s Margaret Thatcher –, Reaganomics ”, Réka Juhász, Nathan J, Lane, Dani Rodrik, government’s, Vincent Deluard, StoneX, Lockheed Martin, Peter Thal Larsen, Oliver Taslic, Thomas Shum Organizations: Republicans, Capitol, REUTERS, Reuters, Bank, Asset, Monetary Fund, Treasury, Capital Economics, Reuters Graphics Reuters Graphics, Capital, Facebook, Meta, Lockheed, Micron Technology, U.S, Congress, Nasdaq, Energy, Exxon Mobil, Labour Party, Thomson Locations: Washington , U.S, , Ukraine, Covid, Europe, United States, United Kingdom, Germany, Japan
U.S. Rep. Mike Johnson (R-LA), the latest House Republican nominee for House Speaker, talks to reporters prior to another round of voting for Speaker of the House on Capitol Hill in Washington, October 25, 2023. Newly minted Republican House Speaker Mike Johnson has quietly assembled a group of wealthy Louisiana political backers who could become key players in GOP fundraising under Johnson's speakership. Johnson's election last week has reportedly already provided a boost to the National Republican Congressional Committee, the official campaign arm for House Republicans. Along with the speakership, Johnson also assumed the role of fundraiser-in-chief for House Republicans. Bollinger is widely viewed as one of the most influential Republican political donors in Louisiana.
Persons: Mike Johnson, Johnson, Johnson's, Kevin McCarthy, McCarthy, Donald " Boysie, Bollinger, Donald Trump, George H.W, George H.W . Bush, George W, Bush, Sen, John McCain, Mitt Romney Organizations: Rep, Republican, Capitol, GOP, CNBC, National Republican Congressional Committee, House Republicans, Politico, Congressional, Fund Locations: Washington, Louisiana, George H.W ., R, Utah
CNN —The arc of Rep. Mike Johnson’s career encapsulates the shifting priorities of the religious right in the era of Donald Trump. More than half of White evangelicals agreed with that statement as well – the only major religious denomination in which it found majority support. Yet both groups are much more influential inside the GOP coalition, with evangelicals representing nearly one-third of Republican voters and all White Christians about two-thirds. But in Congress, Johnson has also identified more with some of the party’s Trump-era priorities that revolve around demographic change. But each man appears equally committed to a vision of America that elevates the moral and political preferences of conservative White Christians over any other group.
Persons: Mike Johnson’s, Donald Trump, Barack Obama’s, Johnson, MAGA, Long, Trump’s, Trump, Robert P, Jones, Johnson “, , Mike Podhorzer, ” Podhorzer, Jimmy Carter, Jerry Falwell, Pat Robertson, James Dobson, ” Jones, Dobson, CNN’s KFile, KFile, he’s, Ron DeSantis, Marjorie Taylor, it’s, ” Johnson, He’s, , Biden, who’s, PRRI, there’s, Tresa Undem, Undem, White, George W, Bush, Obama, Pete Wehner, Wehner, David Barton, Barton, that’s, ” Wehner, , ” Barton Organizations: CNN, Louisiana Republican, Republican, GOP, Yorker, Trump, Survey, Religion Research Institute, White, AFL, CIO, Republicans, Representatives, Alliance Defense Fund, Defending, Gov, Georgia Rep, Whites, Trinity Forum, , NBC News, Trump - Locations: Louisiana, America, White, , Florida, Mexico
In the first major legislative action under new Speaker Mike Johnson, House of Representatives Republicans unveiled a standalone supplemental spending bill only for Israel on Monday. Republicans have a 221-212 majority in the House, but Biden's fellow Democrats control the Senate 51-49. To become law, the bill would have to pass both the House and Senate and be signed by Biden. The top Senate Democrat said the Republican bill would be dead on arrival in the upper chamber, even if it passed the House. "We need to treat all four of these areas, all four of them, Ukraine, Israel, Taiwan and the border," McConnell told reporters.
Persons: Anas, Joe Biden, Mike Johnson, Joe Biden's, Biden, Chuck Schumer, Mitch McConnell, McConnell, Antony Blinken, Johnson, Defense Lloyd Austin, Blinken, Matthew Miller, Patricia Zengerle, Costas Pitas, Jonathan Oatis, Stephen Coates Organizations: REUTERS, Rights, Republicans, Revenue Service, Democratic, Israel, Senate, Democrat, Republican, Leader, Management, Budget, Defense, Department, Thomson Locations: Gaza, Israel, Ukraine, China, U.S, Mexico, East, Taiwan
President Joe Biden’s Cabinet secretaries will be advocating for the foreign aid to a mostly friendly audience in the Senate, where majority Democrats and many Republicans support tying aid for the two countries together. Despite growing questions about the Ukraine aid within the Republican conference, Senate GOP Leader Mitch McConnell has forcefully advocated tying the aid for Ukraine and Israel together. As they returned to Washington on Monday night, Senate Republicans who support the Ukraine aid were uncertain of the path forward. 2 Senate Republican, said it could complicate Democrats’ efforts to pass the two together if there were a bipartisan vote for the Israel aid alone in the House. In recent weeks, though, a growing group of Senate Republicans have joined the majority of House Republicans who are advocating to slow down or stop U.S. aid to Ukraine.
Persons: Lloyd Austin, Antony Blinken, Joe Biden’s, Mike Johnson, Biden, , Chuck Schumer, Vladimir Putin, Patty Murray, Maine Sen, Susan Collins, ” Murray, Mitch McConnell, Oksana Markarova, ” Markarova, embolden Putin, Sen, John Thune of, Thune, Republican Sen, Joni Ernst, Iowa, Ohio Sen, J.D, Vance, Putin, Johnson, Schumer, “ we're, Richard Neal, Ron Wyden, ” Wyden, Karine Jean, Pierre, ” “, , Seung Min Kim, Fatima Hussein, Tara Copp Organizations: WASHINGTON, , Senate, Republican, Internal Revenue Service, Republicans, Hamas, Senate Republicans, House Republicans, Fox News, Democrat, New York Rep, White, Associated Press Locations: United States, Israel, Ukraine, America, Russia, Taiwan, China, U.S, Mexico, Ukrainian, Kentucky, Washington, John Thune of South Dakota, Ohio
Mr. Johnson, the Louisiana Republican who has personally voted against sending military aid to Kyiv, released a $14 billion aid bill for Israel on Monday. But Mr. Johnson spurned that request, in an acknowledgment of how toxic funding for Ukraine has become among Republicans. agents,” Mr. Johnson said. “Instead of advancing a serious proposal to defend Israel, defend Ukraine and provide humanitarian aid, this House G.O.P. My guess is you can get Ukraine aid passed, probably as a stand-alone bill here.
Persons: Mike Johnson’s, Biden, Johnson, Biden’s, Fox News’s, ” Mr, Chuck Schumer, Mr, Kevin McCarthy, Thomas Massie of, Marjorie Taylor Greene, , , Ms, Greene, , Steven Ellis, MacGuineas, Mitch McConnell of, , Schumer, McConnell, Oksana Markarova, I’ve, Johnson’s, Susan Collins of, “ I’m, Josh Hawley, Let’s, Hawley, McConnell “, let’s, Patty Murray, Antony J, Blinken, ” Zach Montague Organizations: Senate, Louisiana Republican, Internal Revenue Service, Israel, Fox, Democratic, Republicans, United, Taxpayers, Federal Budget, Biden, Republican, University of Louisville, Ukraine, Mr Locations: Israel, Ukraine, Louisiana, Kyiv, Taiwan, United States, New York, Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia, Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, America, Kentucky, Ukrainian, Susan Collins of Maine, Gaza, Josh Hawley of Missouri, Washington, Russia, Iran
Republicans have been trying to make sure that Israel and Ukraine aid are voted on separately. But Johnson's Israel bill is toxic for Democrats and increases the chance that the GOP gets jammed. AdvertisementAdvertisementMany Republicans really, really don't want to have to vote on a bill that includes both Israel and Ukraine aid. It would've been passed the House by an overwhelming bipartisan vote and applied significant pressure to senators who want to keep Israel aid linked with Ukraine aid. Nonetheless, Johnson's bill makes it only more likely that anti-Ukraine aid Republicans get rolled.
Persons: Johnson's, , Biden, Republican Sen, Roger Marshall of, Marshall, would've, Mike Johnson, Chuck Schumer, Mitch McConnell, McConnell, Johnson, Sen, Ted Cruz, Cruz, Josh Hawley, Missouri, Israel, JD Vance, Ohio, Vance, aren't, We've, Ron Johnson, it's Organizations: GOP, Service, Republicans, Republican, Israel, Democratic, Internal, Kentucky Republican, IRS, Democrats, Biden, today's GOP Locations: Israel, Ukraine, Johnson's Israel, Taiwan, Roger Marshall of Kansas, Ted Cruz of Texas, Wisconsin, today's
“I say to Speaker Johnson – I plead with him – don’t repeat the mistake of McCarthy and others and just follow the hard-right in a partisan way,” Schumer said at a weekly news conference. “It’s not good for the country, it’s not good for the House, it’s not even good for the Republican Party. “Speaker Johnson should learn from the examples of Speaker Boehner, of Speaker Ryan and of Speaker McCarthy,” Schumer said. Though he’s not an outspoken conservative flamethrower like Rep. Jim Jordan, who GOP centrists blocked from gaining the gavel, a Johnson speakership marks a dramatic shift to the right for the conference. And though he faces the same difficulties as former Speaker Kevin McCarthy did with a razor-thin Republican majority, how he fares with the faction of hard-liners that ultimately ousted McCarthy is another story.
Persons: Chuck Schumer, , Johnson –, , McCarthy, ” Schumer, “ It’s, it’s, White, Schumer, Johnson, he’s, Joe Biden, Boehner, Ryan, couldn’t, Jim Jordan, Kevin McCarthy Organizations: Republican Party, Republican, Ukraine, Republicans, Louisiana Republican, GOP, Democrat, White, Locations: York, Israel, Gaza, Louisiana
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