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Congress in chaos over border deal, Israel, Ukraine and Mayorkas impeachment
After months of bickering, Congress remains unable to agree on any legislation
on border security or aid to Israel and Ukraine — all priorities that a majority
of lawmakers agree are needed.


POLITICS


CONGRESS DEVOLVES INTO CHAOS OVER BORDER AND NATIONAL SECURITY FUNDING

Updated February 6, 20247:41 PM ET Originally published February 6, 20241:00 PM
ET

By 

Lexie Schapitl

, 

Claudia Grisales

, 

Deirdre Walsh

, 

Eric McDaniel

Enlarge this image

House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La. Jose Luis Magana/AP hide caption

toggle caption
Jose Luis Magana/AP


House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La.

Jose Luis Magana/AP

After months of stalling an international aid package for Ukraine and Israel in
favor of tougher border policy, top Republicans are calling for a standalone
international aid package because they now oppose the addition of stricter
border policy they demanded.

A bipartisan Senate package that paired border security measures with assistance
to Israel and Ukraine appeared all but dead Tuesday, after Republicans backed
away from the deal amid growing criticism from the right.

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, who on Monday urged his colleagues to
support the package, had shifted dramatically by Tuesday.

"It looks to me and to most of our members that we have no real chance here to
make a law," McConnell told reporters.

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The bill in question was specifically crafted to meet GOP demands that Democrats
link border policy changes to President Biden's request for military aid to
Israel and Ukraine. But by Monday night, Sen. James Lankford, R-Okla., the top
Republican negotiator on the Senate deal, was predicting that a procedural vote
on the package would fail this week.

"We are trying to figure out what to do next," Lankford told reporters in the
Capitol. "People are saying, 'Hey, we need a lot more time to go through this.'"


ELECTIONS


BIDEN TELLS REPUBLICANS TO 'SHOW SOME SPINE,' BUCK TRUMP, AND BACK BORDER BILL

The deal began to unravel after former President Donald Trump publicly trashed
it and House GOP leaders proclaimed it "dead on arrival." The failure of the
package — which includes roughly $20 billion for border provisions and raises
the threshold to meet asylum claims — would cast doubt on Congress' ability to
get anything done on border security or foreign assistance between now and
Election Day.

The chaos over the border is the latest collapse for one of the least productive
congressional sessions in history.


DEMOCRATS GO ON OFFENSE

As Congress stewed, Biden blamed Trump.

"Republicans have to decide who do they serve: Donald Trump or the American
people?" Biden posed in a speech at the White House. "Are they here to solve
problems, or just weaponize problems for political purposes?"



He went on to threaten that a failure on the legislation will become an issue in
his own campaign.

"Every day between now and November, the American people are going to know that
the only reason the border is not secure is Donald Trump and his MAGA Republican
friends," Biden said.

Democrats in Congress also quickly blamed Republicans.


POLITICS


TOP DEM IN IMMIGRATION TALKS SAYS REPUBLICANS ARE IGNORING BORDER CHAOS TO HELP
TRUMP

Connecticut Sen. Chris Murphy suggested Wednesday's procedural vote would likely
mark the end of a bipartisan effort to address the border, saying about
Republicans, "They walked away from the old plan, they'll walk away from a new
plan."

The shift has left senators from both parties discussing plans to go back to the
original plan from last year to try to pass funding for Ukraine, Israel and
humanitarian aid separately.


SENATE PLANS TO FORGE AHEAD WITH A VOTE

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said he plans to move forward with
a procedural vote to begin debate Wednesday or Thursday, in response to
Republican requests for more time to consider the bill.

"Senators are elected to vote, not to be afraid, run away, make excuses when it
comes to voting on the tough issues," Schumer said on the Senate floor. "No one
is being asked to take a position on the supplemental tomorrow. The only thing a
yes vote would allow us for the Senate to simply begin to consider, discuss and
debate the vitally important issues before us now."

Even if the bill were to advance through the Senate, it faced even longer odds
in the House. House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., said Tuesday morning that
"Republicans simply cannot vote for the bill in good conscience," arguing that
it does not do enough to secure the border and that Biden already has legal
authority to address the surge of migrants that he is not using.




WHAT'S NEXT FOR UKRAINE FUNDING?

Several senators have suggested in recent days that Ukraine aid should be
considered independently if the larger package collapses.

But it was Republicans who initially demanded that border policy changes be
paired with Ukraine assistance, and it's not clear there is appetite among the
House GOP for a standalone Ukraine bill.

Former House Speaker Kevin McCarthy was forced to remove $300 million of aid to
Ukraine from a larger defense bill in the fall in order to win over a handful of
GOP holdouts. Ninety-three Republicans voted for an amendment to the defense
bill that would "prohibit security assistance" to Ukraine.

Johnson said Tuesday that efforts to help Ukraine "have not been abandoned. The
Pentagon has warned that Ukrainian forces are running out of ammunition and
other resources now that U.S. funding has lapsed.


POLITICS


SENATE REPUBLICANS CAST SERIOUS DOUBT ON FATE OF BIPARTSAN IMMIGRATION DEAL


POLITICS


NEGOTIATORS RELEASE $118 BILLION BORDER BILL AS GOP LEADERS CALL IT DEAD IN THE
HOUSE


STANDALONE BILL TO AID ISRAEL GOES DOWN

In lieu of the larger package, House Republicans brought forward a bill to
provide military assistance to Israel. But that proposal also failed.

Johnson brought up the bill under suspension of the House rules, which requires
a two-thirds majority to pass. The final vote was 250-180, as the proposal drew
opposition from both sides of the aisle.

House Democratic leaders slammed the standalone proposal as a "nakedly obvious
and cynical attempt" to undermine the bipartisan deal in the Senate. Meanwhile,
the House Freedom Caucus criticized the bill for its lack of financial offsets.

Republican leaders were forced to skirt a Rules Committee hearing on the bill
that might have exposed anger among far-right conservatives. Rules must sign off
on legislation and the full House must agree in order for a bill to come up with
a simple majority vote.


MAYORKAS IMPEACHMENT FAILS, FOR NOW

As the legislative efforts appeared to falter, so too did an entirely partisan
effort by House Republicans to impeach Department of Homeland Security Secretary
Alejandro Mayorkas.



The vote was stuck in a tie for several minutes as leaders scrambled to sway
holdouts. But in the end, four Republicans voted against the measure and the
final vote was 214 to 216, scuttling an effort that was widely seen as an
opportunity to deliver on a key promise to GOP base voters.

Republicans may revisit the impeachment for another vote when Majority Leader
Steve Scalise, R-La., returns to the chamber. Scalise has been out for cancer
treatment.

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