Biden Threatens to Veto Israel Aid Bill

Tue Feb 06 2024
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WASHINGTON: US President Joe Biden on Monday said he would veto a bill supported by House of Representatives’ Republicans that would provide aid to Israel.

The White House pushes for a wider measure for providing aid to Ukraine and Israel and giving new funds for border security.

The White House Office of Management and Budget in a statement said the Biden administration strongly encourages both chambers of the Congress to dismiss this political ploy and quickly send the bipartisan Emergency National Security Supplemental Appropriations Act to the President’s office.

Officials from the president’s administration have been working with Senate Democrats and Republicans on legislation combining an overhaul of US immigration policy and new assistance for border security with billions of dollars in emergency aid for Ukraine, Israel and other partners in the Indo-Pacific region.

The $118 billion aid also would help to provide humanitarian assistance to civilians affected by the conflicts worldwide.

The statement said the administration strongly opposes this scheme which does not secure the border, and does nothing to help the people of Ukraine against Putin’s aggression.

It said the new strategy fails to support the security of American synagogues, mosques, and other places of worship, and denies humanitarian aid to Palestinian civilians, the majority of whom are women and children.

House to reject the bipartisan Senate bill

Republican House Speaker Mike Johnson had announced that the House would reject the bipartisan Senate bill, and vote on a bill providing aid only to Israel this week.

Johnon in the statement termed the the president’s veto threat as an act of betrayal. He said threatening to veto assistance to Israel and to US military forces, President Biden is abandoning his ally in its time of greatest need.

Republicans are divided over the legislation, with Donald Trump the frontrunner for his party’s presidential nomination and his closest allies voicing opposition, terming the Senate plan insufficiently harsh.

Trump has already made security at the border with Mexico a major point in his campaigning against Biden before the November election.

The Republican-majority House in November passed Israel-only bill but it was never taken up in the Democratic-led Senate as Biden requested Congress to approve a broader emergency security package.

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