House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) is finalizing plans for a new bill that aims to increase U.S. funding for Ukraine’s defense measures, deviating from the recently approved $95 billion foreign aid package sent by the Senate. “I think it is a stand-alone, and I suspect it will need to be on suspension,” Johnson told POLITICO in an interview late on Thursday. He also indicated that separating funding for Ukraine and Israel was “under consideration.”
The new proposal could take the form of a potential loan or lend-lease program, an option also pitched by former President Donald Trump last month. The notion borrows a leaf from the playbook of former President Franklin Roosevelt’s early strategy during World War II.
Johnson is also considering a similar model to the REPO Act. Rep. Michael McCaul’s (R-TX) legislation would allow Biden government-seized Russian sovereign assets to be liquidated. The resulting funds would be channeled toward a Ukrainian support fund.
Despite these plans, Johnson indicated that Ukraine funding would be secondary in priority to domestic federal government funding for the remainder of the fiscal year. When asked if he would consider attaching Ukraine funding to the next round of government funding bills due by March 22, he said: “I don’t think leaders of either side of the aisle think that’s a viable option.”
The Republican House Speaker said he remains aligned with the more conservative members of his caucus — though many of those members continue to oppose additional funding for Ukraine. “Philosophically, I’ve always been aligned. It is the tactics that we disagree upon,” Johnson told POLITICO. He added: “I am a lifelong movement conservative, so there’s very little daylight between their core principles and mine. It’s the tactics that we have disagreements upon, but it’s never personal to me.”