The House of Representatives will vote on sending billions more in aid to Ukraine on Tuesday, the day after President Joe Biden conceded he would separate his $33 billion emergency request for Ukraine from the billions he’s seeking in pandemic funding.
House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer said that the House would vote Tuesday on the aid to Ukraine. Congressional Democrats are pushing to boost Biden’s requested $33 billion in aid to almost $40 billion.
There has been historic bipartisan support for helping Ukraine, but Republicans have complained that Biden is seeking too much additional pandemic funding. Biden warned the funding must be passed within about 10 days to avoid delay, calling on lawmakers to “get it to my desk in the next few days” in a statement Monday.
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Latest developments:
►One person was killed and five were wounded when Russian forces fired seven missiles from the air at Odesa on Monday night, hitting a shopping center and a warehouse, the Ukrainian military said.
►The United States is suspending 25% import taxes on Ukraine’s steel in a show of support for the country’s beleaguered economy during the Russian invasion.
Biden choice for ambassador to Ukraine faces confirmation hearing
Career foreign service officer Bridget Brink, President Joe Biden’s nominee for U.S. ambassador to Ukraine, faces a confirmation hearing Tuesday before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Lawmakers are likely to use the session to grill Brink – not just about her credentials and plans for reopening the U.S. Embassy in Kyiv but also about the Biden administration’s broader effort to help Ukraine repel Russia’s military assault. Brink currently serves as ambassador to the Slovak Republic. Senate Democrats are likely to push for her quick confirmation, saying she is highly qualified and desperately needed.
“Particularly as Russian forces bear down in communities across Ukraine with horrifying violence, having an ambassador placed is essential to coordinate key military and humanitarian assistance and help our partners defend themselves,” said Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, D-New Hampshire.
– Deirdre Shesgreen and Maureen Groppe
Russia’s Victory Day ends without an escalation of war as some expected
Some analysts and Western officials braced for Russian President Vladimir Putin to ramp up attacks or declare victory in the war in Ukraine on the country’s Victory Day, the nation’s largest public holiday.
But Putin refrained from doing so during his speech in Moscow’s Red Square on Monday, instead sticking with the phrase he’s used since Feb. 24 to describe Russia’s invasion: “special military operation.” He didn’t declare victory over Ukraine, and there was no discernable or markedly noticeable increase in attacks Monday, either.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy also celebrated Victory Day in Ukraine Monday, promising that Ukraine will soon have two Victory Days: one celebrating the defeat of Nazism in Europe, and the other celebrating Ukraine’s victory against Russia.
Contributing: The Associated Press