RT.com
06 Jun 2026, 00:18 GMT+10
However, the legislations sponsors admit it faces near-certain defeat in the Senate and a likely Trump veto
The US House of Representatives has passed a bill on imposing new sanctions on Russia and expanding Ukraine aid, with the move being largely driven by Democrats and 18 Republicans breaking party ranks. However, even the bill's supporters conceded that the legislation was more of a symbolic gesture as it is facing an uphill battle in the Senate and a likely veto from US President Donald Trump.
The so-called Ukraine Support Act, introduced by Rep. Gregory Meeks (D-NY) in April 2025, passed Thursday with 226 votes for and 195 against.
If agreed by Congress, it would authorize over $1 billion in emergency security and reconstruction funding and $8 billion in direct loans to Ukraine, impose mandatory escalating sanctions on Russian financial institutions and energy companies, levy a 500% tariff on Russian imports, and establish a Ukraine Reconstruction Trust Fund.
The bill made its way to a vote after its supporters pulled a rare legislative maneuver called a discharge petition, which allowed them to bypass the Republican leadership - including the speaker and committee chairs - who were opposed to the move.
While the bill's sponsors painted it as a "historic" measure that would support Ukraine's "fighting for its sovereignty and survival," its opponents were not convinced, suggesting that it would dim any hopes for a peaceful Russia-Ukraine settlement.
"If you support this bill, then clearly you are not interested in peace because the consequences would tie the hands of this president and could lead to future hostilities that would bleed over into Europe," Republican congressman Keith Self said.
Rep. Brian Mast, chair of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, was equally dismissive, calling it "a cudgel to fight against President Trump" and "an unserious bill that was crafted basically a year-and-a-half ago."
According to CNN, Speaker Mike Johnson privately urged members to vote against the bill, asking them to give Trump more time and space to negotiate with Russia.
While the bill has cleared the House, its further prospects are dim. Republican congressman Brian Fitzpatrick, one of the legislation's supporters, admitted that "it's probably not going to get 60 votes in the Senate, but it's going to hopefully force the Senate to address the issue."
Even if it were to pass the Senate, Trump would likely veto it, as the president has repeatedly resisted legislation that constrains his ability to negotiate on foreign policy.
Trump has been opposed to providing unconditional support to Ukraine, with most of the US military aid currently being paid for by Kiev's backers in the West through the PURL mechanism.
Moscow has dismissed all Western sanctions as "illegal," noting that the US restrictions "are harmful for building ties." Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov has also noted that Moscow has seen no progress toward a Ukraine settlement nearly a year after the Putin-Trump summit in Alaska.
"The Russian leadership accepted [American] proposals [on Ukraine]. And since then, we have not seen any progress, no desire to convince Ukraine to accept these American proposals," he added.
(RT.com)
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