Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is expected to accept the invitation.
WASHINGTONâHouse Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) announced on May 23 that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has been invited to address a joint session of Congress amid the war between Israel and Hamas.
Mr. Johnson confirmed the invitation at an event hosted by the Israeli Embassy at the National Building Museum. He did not specify the date of the address.
Mr. Netanyahu is expected to accept the invitation.
âI would love to have him come and address a joint session of Congress,â he said. âWe will certainly extend that invitation.â
On May 22, Mr. Johnson said his staff and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumerâs staff were working out the logistics.
The news comes a couple of months after Mr. Schumer decried Mr. Netanyahuâs handling of the war and called for new elections in Israel.
Mr. Johnson rebuked Mr. Schumerâs comments, calling them âhighly inappropriate.â
Mr. Johnson didnât explicitly say his efforts to invite Mr. Netanyahu to address Congress are part of a further effort to chastise Mr. Schumer, but he did take the opportunity during the CNBC interview segment to again criticize the Democrat Senate leader.
âWhat Chuck Schumer did was almost staggering, just unbelievable,â Mr. Johnson said on March 21. âTo suggest to our strongest ally in the Middle East, the only stable democracy, that he knows better how to run their democracy is just patently absurd.â
He told âSquawk Boxâ that Mr. Schumerâs comments were âoutrageousâ and a âterrible signal to our allies and our enemies around the world,â noting that he wished the Senate majority leader âwould keep his comments to himself.â
Senate Leader on Board
On May 21, Mr. Schumer said he supported inviting Mr. Netanyahu to Congress.
âIâm discussing that now with the Speaker of the House and as Iâve always said our relationship with Israel is ironclad and transcends any one prime minister or president,â he said during a press conference following the weekly Senate policy luncheon.
Members of Congress have already told The Epoch Times whether they would attend the speech were it to happen.
âI probably would not go,â said Rep. Rosa DeLauro (D-Conn.) without elaborating.
The invitation comes as the International Criminal Court this week announced it will seek warrants for the arrest of Mr. Netanyahu, Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant, and Hamas leaders Yahya Sinwar, Ismail Haniyeh, and Mohammed Diab Ibrahim Al-Masri for allegedly committing war crimes and crimes against humanity, beginning with the Hamas attack on Oct. 7 and continuing with Israelâs response.
Israel and the United States have rebuked the announcement.
Hamas, justifying its âarmed resistance,â said in a May 20 statement that the ICC decided to âequate the victim with the executioner.â
The last time Mr. Netanyahu addressed Congress was in 2015 when he warned about the then-upcoming Iran nuclear deal, which he said he opposed because the United States and allies gave Tehran sanctions relief while not adequately addressing its nuclear program and not dealing with Iranâs other activities, such as the regimeâs leading support for terrorism.
A number of Democrats boycotted the 2015 address, and the Obama administration refused to meet with Mr. Netanyahu during his visit.
Ryan Morgan contributed to this report.
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
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