U.S. Senate passes $1.5 trillion gov't funding bill with Ukraine aid
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[March 11, 2022]
By Makini Brice and Richard Cowan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Senate on
Thursday approved legislation providing $1.5 trillion to fund the
federal government through Sept. 30 and to allocate $13.6 billion to aid
Ukraine.
The 2,700-page bill passed in a bipartisan 68-31 vote, one day after the
House of Representatives approved the package.
President Joe Biden is expected to sign the bill into law, averting
agency shutdowns ahead of the midnight Friday deadline when existing
U.S. government funds expire.
"We're keeping our promises to support Ukraine as they fight for their
lives against the evil Vladimir Putin," Senate Majority Leader Chuck
Schumer said, referring to Russia's president who has orchestrated a
massive attack against its neighbor.
The aid for Ukraine is designed to finance ammunition and other military
supplies, as well as humanitarian support.
The legislation's passage follows months of negotiations over the
federal government's funding and therefore policy priorities.
It also comes as lawmakers jostle to show support of Ukraine in its
battle against Russian forces, with Democrats and Republicans saying the
Biden administration must do more to help Kyiv.
On Wednesday, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi told reporters that this
Ukraine aid package likely would be followed by additional measures to
help Kyiv battle Russia and rebuild from the destruction brought by
Moscow's attacks.
On Thursday, ahead of the vote, Republican senators called for the Biden
administration to send Ukraine the fighter jets the country's President
Volodymyr Zelenskiy had requested. The Biden administration has argued
that providing combat aircraft, even if they were being supplied by
Poland, would dangerously escalate the conflict.
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U.S. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) hosts a meeting
with Supreme Court nominee and federal appeals court Judge Ketanji
Brown Jackson in the U.S. Capitol in Washington, U.S., March 2,
2022. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
The House also approved a bill that
banned imports of Russian oil and called for reviewing Russia's
participation in some international trade programs, including the
World Trade Organization.
That measure's fate in the Senate was unclear. Biden is expected to
call on Friday for an end of normal trade relations with Russia.
Besides providing money for ammunition and other military supplies
and humanitarian aid for Ukrainians, the legislation funds regular
U.S. military programs and an array of non-defense operations
through Sept. 30, including money for infrastructure projects
authorized by an earlier bipartisan package.
Senator Richard Shelby, the senior Republican on the Senate
Appropriations Committee, applauded the spending bill for increasing
defense spending by nearly $42 billion over last year to total $782
billion.
Without passage of this legislation by midnight Friday, federal
agencies would have had to begin laying off workers and suspending
government programs deemed non-essential.
The Senate also passed a stop-gap bill extending existing federal
funding through Tuesday so that congressional clerks have the time
they need to process the sprawling "omnibus" legislation -- a chore
that could go beyond Friday's midnight deadline.
That ensures no interruption in government services before Biden
receives the omnibus bill from Congress for signing into law.
(Reporting by Makini Brice, Richard Cowan and David Morgan; Editing
by Scott Malone, Chizu Nomiyama, Jonathan Oatis, Cynthia Osterman
and Kim Coghill)
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