Six House Republicans broke with party leadership on Wednesday to help advance the Ukraine Support Act alongside Democrats, clearing a key procedural hurdle and moving the foreign aid package closer to a definitive House floor vote.
The rare bipartisan maneuver underscored growing pressure in Congress to replenish Ukraine’s defenses as Kyiv faces intensified Russian missile and drone attacks, while also exposing new divisions inside the Republican conference over continued US support for Ukraine.
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Breaking the stalemate
The House Rules Committee has long served as a gatekeeper for major legislation, determining which bills can reach the floor and under what conditions. Conservative opposition had previously slowed the Ukraine aid package, leaving supporters searching for ways to bypass internal resistance.
On Wednesday, six Republicans joined Democrats to move the measure forward, a break from party leadership that signaled frustration among national security-minded lawmakers over delays in aid to Kyiv.
The move positions the Ukraine Support Act for a floor vote, though the bill has not yet received final passage.
What the bill includes
The Ukraine Support Act is aimed at strengthening Ukraine’s battlefield position and sustaining its government as Russia continues its full-scale war.
The package includes support for critical defensive needs, including artillery ammunition to counter Russian front-line advances and air defense interceptors to protect Ukrainian cities and civilian infrastructure.
It also includes provisions for sustained intelligence sharing, direct economic support for Ukrainian government operations, reconstruction assistance, and tougher measures targeting Russia’s ability to finance the war.
Political fallout
The vote highlights a widening fracture within the Republican conference. While leadership had sought to delay or reshape the package, several GOP lawmakers chose to side with Democrats in advancing the measure.
For Ukraine’s supporters in Washington, the move marks a significant procedural breakthrough after months of stalled momentum. For Republican leaders, it points to the limits of party discipline on national security issues, especially as Russia intensifies attacks and Kyiv presses for more urgent Western support.
Democrats, meanwhile, presented the vote as evidence that bipartisan backing for Ukraine remains alive in Congress despite growing resistance from the party’s right flank.
The measure now heads toward a decisive floor vote, where lawmakers will be forced to take a public position on the future of US support for Ukraine.
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