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Senate Republicans Block Bipartisan Border Deal

A general view of the U.S. Capitol Building in Washington, D.C., on Wednesday, October 13, 2021, amid the coronavirus pandemic. Last night, the House of Representatives voted in favor of a short term debt ceiling lift after the Senate last week, as negotiations over the bulk of President Biden’s agenda are ongoing between progressive and moderate Democrats. (Graeme Sloan/Sipa USA)No Use Germany.

· The Fiscal Times

Senate Republicans on Wednesday blocked a $118 billion package of border reforms and foreign aid —a deal they had insisted was needed to unlock more funding for Ukraine in its war against Russia. In a 49-50 vote, most Senate Republicans and a handful of Democrats rejected the bipartisan compromise that negotiators had crafted over months of talks, despite the inclusion of many of Republican demands on border policy and the endorsement of some solidly conservative groups, including the union of Border Patrol officers.

The collapse of the deal leaves the fate of near-term funding for Ukraine and Israel in doubt, though Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer moved quickly to bring up a foreign aid package that strips out the border measures, a Plan B that had at one point been Plan A.

“Republicans have said they can’t pass Ukraine without border. Now they say they can’t pass Ukraine with border. Today, I’m giving them a choice,” Schumer said on the Senate floor. “I urge Republicans to take yes for an answer.”

It’s not clear when or whether Republicans would get to yes on the foreign aid, even as many GOP senators support that funding. An afternoon procedural vote was held open for hours as Republicans sought to regroup and get on the same page. Even if the Senate can pass an aid bill, it would face challenges in the House, where many Republicans oppose more funding for Ukraine.

“We’ll see what the Senate does,” House Speaker Mike Johnson told reporters earlier in the day. “We’re allowing the process to play out and we’ll handle it as it’s sent over.”

Dialing up the Republican dysfunction: The Senate’s border deal was doomed even before it was released. Yes, many Republicans had insisted on tougher laws to address the surge of migrants coming through the southern border as a prerequisite for foreign aid funding. But any momentum for a deal in the Republican conference faded fast after former president Donald Trump, intent on using the border as a potent political weapon in his campaign to win back the White House, blasted the bill and warned senators against backing it. Many Republicans rejected the deal even before it was final, while others did so within hours of its release.

“The damage Republicans have done this week to their credibility cannot be understated,” Schumer said.

Reaganite Republicans like to cite the former president’s willingness to accept half a loaf and go back for more, but many in today’s Republican Party prefer to starve so they can tell their base they’re on a hunger strike, standing up for conservative principles and refusing to work with Democrats.