The White House expressed opposition to the bill, saying it would âundermine the presidentâs ability to execute an effective foreign policy.â
The House is set to pass a bill on May 16 that would prohibit the Biden administration from withholding military assistance or services from Israel.
The move comes after the administration put a hold on a shipment of bombs and munitions to the Jewish state over Washingtonâs concerns about a full-scale Israeli operation in the Gazan city of Rafah.
The White House and House Democrat leadership are against the bill.
âThe legislation would constitute an unprecedented limitation on President Bidenâs executive authority and administrative discretion to implement U.S. foreign policy,â said House Minority Whip Katherine Clark (D-Mass.) in a message to House Democrats, urging them to vote against the bill.
The measure would require the State Department and Defense Department to allocate all funding for Israel within 30 days of the billâs enactment.
The bill would apply to U.S. security assistance for Israel passed during and before the 2024 fiscal year, prohibiting the administration from withholding, canceling, halting, or reversing U.S. military aid or services to Israel.
It would also block the funding of the salaries of State Department and Defense Department employees who take such action.
The White House said in a statement that the bill would âundermine the presidentâs ability to execute an effective foreign policy.â
âThe bill is a misguided reaction to a deliberate distortion of the administrationâs approach to Israel,â said the White House.
âThis bill, if enacted, could lead to spiraling unintended consequences, prohibiting the United States from adjusting our security assistance posture with respect to Israel in any way, including to address unanticipated emergent needs, even if Israel and the United States agree that military needs have changed and supplies should change accordingly,â it added.
House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) fired back at the White House over its veto threat.
âIt wasnât that long ago when President Biden called for the Elimination of Violence. Heâs not doing that anymore,â he said, adding that he has âturned [his] back on Israelâ and is âcarrying water for Iran,â which backs the Hamas terrorist group, which launched the Oct. 7 attack on Israel.
House Democrats have expressed mixed feelings about the bill.
âIf Speaker Johnson moves ahead with a vote on another false, meaningless and misguided bill, once again choosing to undermine the bipartisan nature of support for Israel, I will vote no,â he added.
Rep. Greg Landsman (D-Ohio) told Axios, âI’ll vote for it, but they should pull the bill and work with one of us to write it in such a way that it gets support from the vast majority of the House.â
The bill is dead on arrival in the Senate anyway, as Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) noted the White Houseâs opposition to the measure.
âIf Schumer refuses to bring this up for a vote, he’ll be telling the world that his party, the Democrats, are no longer willing to stand with our great allies,â said Mr. Johnson on May 16.
House Majority Leader Steve Scalise (R-La.) predicted that public pressure will force Mr. Schumer to put the bill on the Senate floor. To not do so, said Mr. Scalise, would be to â[side] with Hamas.â
In an interview on CNN last week, President Joe Biden said his administration would continue to provide defense weapons to Israel, but it would not give Israel the military assistance it needs to carry out a full-scale invasion of Rafah.
Stacy Robinson contributed to this report.
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
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