President Joe Biden last month asked Congress to approve about
$40 billion in additional spending, including $24 billion for
Ukraine and other international needs, in a test of the
country's willingness to keep supporting Ukraine as it fights
Russian invaders.
"We also must continue standing with our friends in Ukraine, now
more than ever, as the counteroffensive against Putin's forces
is in full swing," the Senate's Democratic majority leader,
Chuck Schumer, said in remarks opening the Senate after its
August recess.
"The Senate's top priority must be keeping the American people
safe. And this month we'll have the chance to do that with
supplemental appropriations for urgent national security and
disaster relief priorities," Republican leader Mitch McConnell
said.
"We need to continue to invest in America's defense industrial
base, both to support our partners in today's fight and to help
our forces deter tomorrow's threats," he said.
Biden's national security adviser, Jake Sullivan, told reporters
at the White House earlier on Tuesday that the administration
was working closely with both the Senate and House of
Representatives on the supplemental aid package, which seeks
funding through the end of 2023.
Sullivan said the administration believed it would be able to
secure the necessary funding. "The conversations have been
constructive, they've been positive they've been substantive and
we anticipate being able to work our way through to a sound
package so that Ukraine can get what it needs," he said.
Prospects for Biden's supplemental request could be less bright
in the House, where Republicans hold a slim majority and some on
the far right, particularly those most closely allied with
former Republican President Donald Trump, have been critical of
U.S. funding for Kyiv.
Biden's request for Ukraine aid comes as lawmakers face an Oct.
1 deadline to pass at least a short-term spending bill or face
an embarrassing government shutdown.
(Reporting by Patricia Zengerle, additional reporting by
Katharine Jackson; editing by Grant McCool)
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